Pattiyal

Pattiyal (English: List) is a 2006 Indian Tamil-language crime thriller film written and directed by Vishnuvardhan. The film tackles the issue of dons. It stars Bharath, Arya, Pooja Umashankar, Padmapriya Janakiraman, Cochin Haneefa and Santhana Bharathi in pivotal roles. The film's score and soundtrack are composed by Yuvan Shankar Raja. This film was released on 17 March 2006. This film was based on the 1999 Thai film Bangkok Dangerous.

Pattiyal
Directed byVishnuvardhan
Produced byPunnagai Poo Gheetha
Written byRajkannan (Dialogue)
Screenplay byVishnuvardhan
Story byVishnuvardhan
Original Story:
StarringBharath
Arya
Pooja
Padmapriya Janakiraman
Cochin Hanifa
Music byYuvan Shankar Raja
CinematographyNirav Shah
Edited byA. Sreekar Prasad
Production
company
Distributed bySG Films
Release date
17 March 2006
Running time
140 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil
Box officeest. 11 crore (equivalent to 28 crore or US$4.0 million in 2019)

Plot

Kosi (Arya) and Selva (Bharath), are contract killers working for a middleman with the ironic name of Sami (Cochin Haneefa). Vishnuvardan portrays this morbid telling of two orphaned youths with incredible realism of trust, friendship, and ultimate betrayal masterfully. Kosi is an unblinking man with a stubborn feel for life, thereby refusing to love and be loved. Selva, deaf and dumb, is equally intrepid, although he has a heart ticking beneath the dark, dire exterior.

Saroja (Padmapriya Janakiraman), a salesgirl at a garment company, is an outgoing, sprightly girl and a friend of both Kosi and Selva. She is in deeply in love with Kosi, but the latter only finds her presence as a nuisance, whereas Saroja's chief manager stubbornly tries to make Saroja sleep with him. In stark contrast to this romance is the love between Selva and Sandhya (Pooja), who are smitten with each other after some fate-based encounters that bring some lighthearted humor to the film. As the film progresses, Kosi and Saroja end up sleeping together when Kosi begins to drink excessively, promptly making him start to realize his feelings for Saroja. Unfortunately, this newfound happiness does not last as their profession does not allow it to.

Kosi and Selva set out to assassinate Avinashi Nachimuthu Gounder (Santhana Bharathi), a business tycoon and uprising politician, as instructed to do so by Sami. Kosi and Selva mutually agree to make this assignment their last, and to begin leading normal lives with their newfound loves Saroja and Sandhya respectively. A new twist occurs in the story where the people who hired Saami told him to finish off Kosi and Selva once the job is completed.

Upon preparing for the assassination, Kosi becomes unable to think as he finds himself overwhelmed with feelings of love, at which point Selva decides that he should finish the execution himself and Kosi should go speak with Saroja. Kosi visits Saroja at her home where he finds her shivering and with bruises. Saroja then tells Kosi how her chief manager intruded the house and sexually violated her after she refused to love him. Infuriated at this, an emotionally shaken Kosi finds the manager and beats him to a horrific death. Meanwhile, Selva had cunningly assassinated Gounder and is returning home. The manager's boss, who happens to be a big don himself, finds out Kosi is the one responsible for the manager's death and seeks out revenge. He gets hold of Saami and blackmails him to bring Kosi to him for his life. Unknowingly, Kosi goes with Saami and is killed in the ambush from a gunshot to his head.

Selva, who returns later, finds out about this unfortunate event and seeks revenge. He visits Sandhya and questions her about Kosi's murder and the people responsible for his death. He intrudes the don's house and kills everyone in his way, including the don. When Selva returned home, Sandhya was shocked to see him with many injuries. She tells him to wait by the door while she went to call for an auto rickshaw to get them both to the hospital. Meanwhile, the irritating boy who appeared before begging for a job stabs Selva in the same approach as Selva did in the introduction scene in the hotel room. The boy who was still recovering for the shock that he actually stabbed Selva stabbed him again multiple times when he saw Sandhya rushing towards him. Selva dies from multiple wounds and falls on Sandhya's lap. In the scene before the credits, a scene is shown where Saami is having a chat with the boy who committed the murder. The scene is shown as a deja-vu where Saami convinces Kosi and Selva that they're all part of this scheme together. Saami uses the same dialogue to the boy letting the audience connect that the boy will end being killed too.

Cast

Music

Pattiyal:
The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
Soundtrack album by
Released28 February 2006
Recorded2005
GenreSoundtrack
Length22:19
LabelRoja/Mass Audios
ProducerYuvan Shankar Raja
Yuvan Shankar Raja chronology
'Happy'
(2006)
Pattiyal:
The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack

(2006)
'Raam'
(2006)

The soundtrack was composed by Vishnuvardhan's friend and "usual composer" Yuvan Shankar Raja and released on 28 February 2006.[1] It features 6 tracks overall with lyrics by Pa. Vijay. The soundtrack proved very popular upon release and was cited as a "truly rocking" album.[2][3] Further more, Yuvan Shankar Raja was awarded his first Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Music Director for the musical score in 2006.

TrackSongSinger(s)DurationNotes
1"Dei Namma Melam"Vijay Yesudas3:36
2"Yedhedo Ennangal Vandhu"Yuvan Shankar Raja, Shweta Mohan4:16
3"Kannai Vittu Kann Imaigal"Yuvan2:26
4"Namma Kattula Mazhai Peiyuthu"Ilaiyaraaja, Roshini3:54
5"Kannai Vittu Kann Imaigal (Remix)"Yuvan Shankar Raja, Premji Amaran3:25
6"Poga Poga Boomi Virikirathe"Haricharan, Vijay Yesudas,[4] Saindhavi, Harini Sudhakar4:42

Box office

  • The film was a commercial success[5] grossing 11 crore at the box office.[6]
  • The film was shot in Chennai, India and Race Course area of Coimbatore, India
  • The film was later dubbed into Telugu as Gayam.

References

  1. "'Pattiyal' Audio LaunchP". indiaglitz.com. Retrieved 5 July 2009.
  2. "Pattiyal". musicindiaonline.com. Archived from the original on 22 October 2007. Retrieved 22 February 2009.
  3. "Pattiyal - Magic recreated". indiaglitz.com. Retrieved 22 February 2009.
  4. Parthasarathy, Anusha (3 May 2011). "On the right track". The Hindu. Chennai, India.
  5. Pattiyal was a commercial success
  6. Pattiyal grosses 11 crore at the box office

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