Vennila Kabadi Kuzhu

Vennila Kabadi Kuzhu
Poster
Directed by Suseenthiran
Produced by K. Anand Chakravarthy
Written by Suseenthiran
Bhaskar Sakthi (dialogue)
Starring Vishnu Vishal
Kishore
Saranya Mohan
Srithika
Music by V. Selvaganesh
Cinematography J. Laxman Kumar
Edited by Kasi Viswanathan
Production
company
Imagine Creations
Release date
29 January 2009
Running time
145 minutes
Country India
Language Tamil
Box office 7.1 crore (US$990,000)

Vennila Kabadi Kuzhu (English: White Moon Kabadi Crew) is a 2009 Indian Tamil drama film written and directed by newcomer Susindran, starring debutant Vishnu Vishal, Kishore and Saranya Mohan along with numerous other newcomers in the lead roles.

It was later remade in Telugu as Bheemili Kabaddi Jattu in the year 2010 with Nani and Saranya Mohan in the lead. And remade in Hindi as Badlapur Boys in the year 2014 with Nishan and Saranya Mohan in the lead.

Story

The story unfolds in a remote village near Palani called Kanakkanpatti with a poor goat herd Marimuthu (Vishnu Vishal) as its protagonist who lost education as his father died when he was 13. He also plays kabbadi very well. Marimuthu, along with his childhood friends Ayyappan (Vairavan), Sekar (Nithish), Murthy (Sundar), Appu Kutty (Appukutty), Suri (Soori), and Pandi (Ramesh Pandiyan), are kabbadi players who dream of winning a local tournament.

Sekar is a rich, short-tempered rice mill owner and is always captain of the team. Appu Kutty is a short tea shop owner who often gets a heavy scolding from his old mother-in-law. Suri is a very newlywed man who has only 3 hobbies: eating thrice as normal man, kabbadi, and making love. Pandi is a big, fat local store owner who is a son of an ex-army man. Marimuthu, who lost his father when he was young, works in a farm and can stay in his house only during holidays. Their kabbadi team, Vennila Kabadi Kuzhu, is infamous for never winning a match in their history. In a subplot, Marimuthu meets and flirts with an unnamed beautiful young lady (Saranya Mohan) who comes visiting to his village's annual festival. They organize a friendly kabbadi match with the neighbouring village team for the festival, and Souda Muthu (Kishore), the coach of the state's best kabbadi team, is the chief guest in which an outbreak in the game occurs. Then they go to Madurai for a non-detail known match where Souda Muthu is one of the chief conductors and a coach. He tells it is a state-level pre-qualified tournament in which no local teams may participate. As they prepare to leave, they learn that suddenly their district team has forfeited and hence they join unopposed as Dindigul district team.

Souda Muthu wants to give a rookie substitute of his team (the Paper Mills team, which has won last 2 seasons) into playing 7, but the rest of the team rebel and expel Souda Muthu from coaching them. Then Souda Muthu separates from his state winning team and starts coaching Vennila. The team progresses through the tournament into the final despite the myriad hurdles and disadvantages, with the help of their coach who gives them very hard coaching.

In the semifinals, the opposite team tries to injure Marimuthu and win the game. They succeed in dislocating his collarbone, and Marimuthu is hospitalised. The rest of team ensures that they win by a very huge margin, including a brutal offence attack. Though the collarbone is relocated, Marimuthu must remain in the hospital for the night.

The finals between Vennila and Paper Mills causes high anticipations as one is the defending champion and other is an unknown rookie. The betting bookie fears that Vennila might win. Hence they poison Sekar's mind stating that Railways will choose one player from each finalists, and he must prevent Marimuthu from playing in finals to get the job for himself. Sekar attempts to do so minutes before the finals, but the coach and team turn on him, and he is expelled before the match. The whole of the village has come to watch their match, except Marimuthu's mother.

In the final, Vennila struggles initially but manages to fight back into contention in the second half. As the game ends in a tie, players from each team go up individually against each other as a tiebreaker. Both teams score equal points, and only one upon each side remain. Marimuthu is to be the defence, when the opposite raider has the last raid. The raider attempts to touch him by kicking lightly on his chest and come back, but Marimuthu comes forward and holds his leg, they both fall down, and the raider is prevented from touching the line within the time period. Hence Marimuthu wins the game for Vennilla, and they become the first rookie state champions.

The scene changes to several months later when the unnamed young lady returns to the village festival where she met Marimuthu the previous year. But he is to be found no where. It is revealed later that, Marimuthu died as his heart stopped due to sudden shock he received when the opposite player kicked in his chest and both fell down. However, his friends, despite noticing her search for him, decide not to reveal to her Marimuthu's demise to spare her the anguish. The movie ends ambiguously, with the unnamed lady leaving the village without knowing Marimuthu's fate.

Cast

Production

According to Susindran, the film is based on real life incidents as his father was a kabadi player and Susindran got to know about the insults and pains the player went through, which he wanted to showcase in a film.[1] Also he was said to be inspired from success of the 2002 Bollywood film Lagaan, which was based on cricket.[1]

Box office

  • The film was successful at the box office.[2]

Soundtrack

The songs were penned by Na. Muthukumar, Francis Kriba, Snehan & Karthiknetha and composed by V. Selvaganesh

No.SongLyricistSingersTime
1"Kabadi Kabadi"Francis KribaShankar Mahadevan
2"Lesa Parakkuthu"Na. MuthukumarKarthik & Chinmayi04:19
3"Vandanam Vandanam"SnehanPandi, Malathi, Maya & Vijay
4"Pada Pada"KarthiknethaKarthik
5"Uyiril Yetho"Na. MuthukumarHaricharan

References

  1. 1 2 "rediff.com: Susindran on Vennila Kabadi Kuzhu". Specials.rediff.com. Retrieved 2012-08-05.
  2. Archived 15 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine.
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