Aasai

From Bharatpedia, an open encyclopedia


Aasai
File:Aasai poster.jpg
Poster
Directed byVasanth
Produced byMani Ratnam
S. Sriram
Written byVasanth
StarringAjith Kumar
Suvaluxmi
Music byDeva
CinematographyJeeva
Edited by
Production
company
Release date
8 September 1995
Running time
145 minutess
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Aasai (About this soundpronunciation ) (transl. Desire) is a 1995 Indian Tamil-language romantic thriller film, written and directed by Vasanth and produced by Mani Ratnam. The film stars Ajith Kumar and debutant Suvaluxmi, while Prakash Raj, Rohini, Poornam Vishwanathan, Nizhalgal Ravi, and Vadivelu play supporting roles. Jeeva was the cinematographer, while Deva composed the music. Upon release, the film received positive reviews and went on to become a commercial success at the box office.[1] The film was remade in Hindi as Pyaar Zindagi Hai.

Plot[edit]

Saraswathi "Yamuna", the younger daughter of an Orthodox father, comes to Madras for finishing her studies. Major Madhavan, the husband of Yamuna's elder sister Ganga, gets infatuated with Yamuna after seeing her photo in a letter sent by her. Meanwhile, Yamuna meets Jeevanantham "Jeeva" in a bus, who gives his ticket to her as she had not taken her own. Later one day, Jeeva decides to express his love to Yamuna by writing "1 4 3" (the number of letters in "I love you") in a letter and giving it to her, but he witnesses a group beating a boy who did the same thing, so he disposes the letter. It is found by Yamuna, who realises his love.

One day when they are walking together, Jeeva tries to remove dirt from Yamuna's eyes, and he kisses her. Yamuna is angry with him. Jeeva senses it and gets wet in the rain and gets a cold. Hearing this, Yamuna meets him. Jeeva expresses that she is the only medicine to him, and he needs her. Yamuna promises she will marry him. On Yamuna's birthday, Jeeva jumps into her house and presents her a puppy. One day, fearing that Yamuna's father might not marry him to Yamuna, he decides to marry her in a register office, but Yamuna refuses and Jeeva leaves.

Meanwhile, Madhavan settles his father-in-law's debts and earns his trust. He also pays for connecting a landline to Yamuna's house and talks to her regularly, but Ganga is unaware of this. One day, Ganga finds it, and starts to realise his true identity. Madhavan then expresses his love affair on Yamuna to his wife. This makes her so upset that she attempts to go and live with her father and Yamuna. Madhavan imprisons her in home, and one day he tells her she can go to her father's house by flight, and tricks her by putting a sleeping pill in milk and making her drink it. She falls unconscious. Madhavan then murders Ganga by suffocating her to death with a polythene cover and tying it around her head by his shoelace, and lies to everyone that she died from heart attack. He then makes Yamuna and her father stay with him in Delhi to look after his baby, but he has other plans.

Jeeva comes to Delhi. One day he sees Yamuna, who ignores him. Later he sees her carrying the puppy he presented and tells why she needs the puppy when she does not need him. Yamuna leaves the puppy in the middle of the road. Later that night, Yamuna comes to take the puppy in the rain. Jeeva sees this and realises she really loves him. Two months later, Yamuna's father decides to get her married to Jeeva. This shocks Madhavan, and he decides to stop the marriage. Yamuna's family meets Jeeva in a restaurant. While Jeeva was talking to Madhavan, he takes advantage of a careless Sikh and dashes against him, causing Jeeva to lose his balance as well. In the melee, Madhavan steals Jeeva's purse. When Jeeva senses his purse missing, he confronts the Sikh and makes a fool of himself, exactly as Madhavan anticipated. Later, he suspects Madhavan and wants to frisk him. This angers Yamuna's father as he blindly believes Madhavan.

Madhavan later gives Jeeva's flight ticket and wants to send him to Madras, but Jeeva fools Madhavan by tearing the ticket and spending the day with Yamuna. Enraged, Madhavan drenches his baby in the rain and calls Yamuna to look for it. Later, Madhavan arranges for some men to pour liquor into Jeeva's mouth and lay him in the middle of the road. Madhavan makes Yamuna and her father believe Jeeva is a drunkard. The father boasts that he has the divine gift to discern good versus bad people upon sight; with that "gift", he declares Jeeva a bad person. Meanwhile, Jeeva complains to Lt. Col Hariharan, a friend and higher officer to Madhavan, but he does not believe Jeeva. Later when celebrating Holi, Madhavan asks Jeeva the puppy he had presented to Yamuna. Jeeva gives it, but Madhavan kills the puppy and frames Jeeva. An argument ensues between them; Madhavan tries to kill Jeeva with a rod, but stops when Yamuna pleads with him.

Hariharan eventually realises the truth about Madhavan and tells him to stop. Instead, Madhavan kills Hariharan, staging it as a car accident. Madhavan plants narcotics in Jeeva's pillows and tips off the police, leading to Jeeva's arrest. While meeting Jeeva in prison, Madhavan boasts and lays the plot out to Jeeva; how he cruelly killed Ganga to get Yamuna. Yamuna overhears this and informs her father. Her father wails in agony for his murdered older daughter and his folly and poor judgement. They plan to escape, but Madhavan arrives, knocks out Yamuna's father, and holds Yamuna prisoner in his house. Jeeva escapes from prison and arrives there. A fight ensues between Madhavan and Jeeva in which Jeeva triumphs. Yamuna and Jeeva take the baby to the hospital as it fainted. Yamuna's father locks the doors, opens the gas cylinder, and lights a matchstick, causing an explosion that kills him and Madhavan. Jeeva is exonerated and unites with Yamuna and the baby.

Cast[edit]

Production[edit]

Development[edit]

Poovellam Kettupaar and Kanne were the working titles during the film's production but Vasanth chose Aasai as the title because "it was about both the protagonist and the antagonist".[2]

Casting[edit]

The lead role was initially offered by Vasanth to Suriya, son of actor Sivakumar, to make his debut but he declined, citing a lack of interest in an acting career.[3][2] He was replaced by Ajith Kumar, after Vasanth and S. Sriram saw him in a dhoti advertisement on Doordarshan.[2] Actor Suresh dubbed Ajith's voice.[4] For the antagonist Major Madhavan, Vasanth considered Manoj K. Jayan as one of the actors but he felt the role needed someone else, he chose Prakash Raj after he was recommended by his mentor K. Balachander.[2] Vasanth chose debutant Suvaluxmi after seeing her performance in the Bengali film Uttoran and he wanted "someone who had an innocent face and could make the audience believe the gullibility of the character."[2]

Filming[edit]

Vasanth chose the Delhi backdrop because Prakash Raj’s character had to be "far away from the heroine's place" and the team shot in the early mornings during their Delhi schedule as the director was "obsessive about onlookers not being part of the frame".[2] The film's military parade scene was filmed at the Chennai branch of the Officers Training Academy after giving an assurance that the character of Madhavan had a "blemishless professional record".[2]

Soundtrack[edit]

Aasai
Soundtrack album by
Released1995
Recorded1995
GenreSoundtrack
Length35:10
LanguageTamil
LabelPyramid
ProducerDeva
Deva chronology
Thaai Manasu
(1994)
Aasai
(1995)
Baasha
(1995)

The music was composed by Deva. Deva was roped in to compose the music because the director and the composer had earlier worked together on Doordarshan shows.[2] To get the right music, Deva and Vasanth had pre-recording sessions to finalise the orchestration and sound of the songs.[2] Mandolin U Shrinivas played the mandolin portions in the song "Pulveli Pulveli".[2]

Track list
No. TitleSinger(s) Length
1. "Konja Naal Poru"  Hariharan 5:10
2. "Meenamma Athikalayilum"  P. Unni Krishnan, Anuradha Sriram 5:32
3. "Shockkadikuthu Sona"  Suresh Peters, G. V. Prakash Kumar 5:42
4. "Pulveli Pulveli"  K. S. Chithra, P. Unni Krishnan 6:26
5. "Pulveli Pulveli (Male)"  P. Unni Krishnan 6:36
6. "Thiloththama"  S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, Swarnalatha 5:44
Total length:
35:10
Asha Asha Asha (Telugu)
Soundtrack album by
Released1995
Recorded1995
GenreSoundtrack
Length34:52
LanguageTelugu
LabelAditya Music
ProducerDeva
Deva chronology
Thaai Manasu
(1994)
Asha Asha Asha (Telugu)
(1995)
Baasha
(1995)

Lyrics were penned by Sirivennela Seetharama Sastry & Vennelakanti.

Track list
No. TitleSinger(s) Length
1. "Konchem Agara"  Hariharan 5:11
2. "Chilakamma"  P. Unni Krishnan, Anuradha Sriram 5:36
3. "Ayyo Ayyayyo"  Suresh Peters, G. V. Prakash Kumar 5:42
4. "Mellaga Mellaga"  K. S. Chithra, P. Unni Krishnan 6:29
5. "Mellaga Mellaga (Male)"  P. Unni Krishnan 6:11
6. "Oka Cheli"  S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, Swarnalatha 5:44
Total length:
34:52

Release[edit]

Upon release, the film won positive reviews from critics.[5] Ananda Vikatan, in a review dated 1 October 1995, rated the film 41 out of 100.[6] The film went on to win three awards at the Tamil Nadu State Awards securing honours for the Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Director for Vasanth, the Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Music Director for Deva and the Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Male Playback Singer for Hariharan.[7] The film was later remade in Hindi as Pyaar Zindagi Hai in 2001.[8] The film ran for more than 210 days in theatres and emerged as a major breakthrough in Ajith Kumar's career.[9]

References[edit]

  1. "The Star Next Door". Rediff.com. 4 April 1997. Retrieved 17 December 2011.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 2.9 "#25YearsOfAasai: For Aasai, I wanted another Arvind Swami, and I found Ajith: Vasanth". The Times of India. 8 September 2020. Archived from the original on 8 September 2020. Retrieved 8 September 2020.
  3. Pillai, Sreedhar (24 July 2002). "A chip off the old block". The Hindu. Retrieved 8 September 2020.
  4. Suresh [@sureshactor] (22 March 2013). "Yes :)" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  5. "Realistic film-making". The Hindu. 1 December 2001. Retrieved 8 September 2020.
  6. "ஆசை". Ananda Vikatan (in தமிழ்). 1 October 1995.
  7. "TAMIL CINEMA. I997-- YEAR HIGHLIGHTS". Archived from the original on 5 January 2009. Retrieved 11 August 2009.
  8. BookMyShow. "Pyaar Zindagi Hai Movie (2001) | Reviews, Cast & Release Date in". BookMyShow. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
  9. "'Thanks to my relationship, I've stopped trusting people'". Rediff.com. 6 July 1999. Retrieved 17 December 2011.

External links[edit]

Template:Vasanth

Information red.svg
Scan the QR code to donate via UPI
Dear reader, We kindly request your support in maintaining the independence of Bharatpedia. As a non-profit organization, we rely heavily on small donations to sustain our operations and provide free access to reliable information to the world. We would greatly appreciate it if you could take a moment to consider donating to our cause, as it would greatly aid us in our mission. Your contribution would demonstrate the importance of reliable and trustworthy knowledge to you and the world. Thank you.

Please select an option below or scan the QR code to donate
₹150 ₹500 ₹1,000 ₹2,000 ₹5,000 ₹10,000 Other