Aval Varuvala

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Aval Varuvala
File:Aval Varuvala DVD Cover.jpg
DVD cover
Directed byRaj Kapoor
Produced byVenkata Apparao C. H.
B. B. Subbarao
Screenplay byRaj Kapoor
Story bySrinivaasa Chakravarthy
Based onPelli (Telugu)
StarringAjith Kumar
Simran
Babloo Prithiveeraj
Sujatha
Music byS. A. Rajkumar
CinematographyK. Prasad
Edited byB. Lenin,
V. T. Vijayan
Production
company
Sri Vijayamathruka Films
Release date
  • 15 May 1998 (1998-05-15)
Running time
152 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Aval Varuvala (transl. Will She Come Over?) is a 1998 Indian Tamil-language romantic comedy thriller film directed by Raj Kapoor. It is the Tamil remake of the 1997 Telugu movie Pelli which itself was based on the 1991 movie Sleeping With The Enemy. The film stars Ajith Kumar and Simran, with Sujatha, and Babloo Prithiveeraj and in other significant roles. It released on 15 May 1998 to positive reviews and became a commercial success.

Plot[edit]

Jeeva (Ajith Kumar) lives with his grandmother Lakshmi (Radha Bhai) in Madurai and says that he would marry the girl that he likes at first sight. He goes to Chennai after getting a job as a bank manager there. In a shopping mall, he gets a glimpse of Divya (Simran) and falls in love with her. He identifies her scooter model and goes on a mission in search of her to end up in a colony surrounded by comedians - Dhandabani (Goundamani), Michael Jackson (Senthil), Major Ramachandran (Venniradai Moorthy), Savithri (Kovai Sarala), and James Thomson (Dhamu). The colony people mistakenly think that Jeeva is trying to steal the scooter, and therefore, he lied that he was looking for a house to rent. Then, he agreed to stay in the colony after confirming that Divya and her mother Janaki (Sujatha) are residing in the colony.

From there on, Jeeva tries to impress Divya. The comedians find out that Jeeva is trying to approach Divya and agree to help him. They ask Janaki's opinion about Divya's marriage. However, Divya refused the offer, saying that she is not interested in getting married. A lonely, sad, pathetic-looking Janaki seemed to hide something. The gang gives a few ideas to persuade Divya, but they all failed. Eventually, tired of foolish ideas, Jeeva tells Janaki that he wants to marry her daughter. Impressed by Jeeva's good manner, Janaki advised Divya to accept him. Truthful to the expectations, Divya revealed that Janaki is actually her mother-in-law.

Knowing that Jeeva loves her, Divya insults him so that he would give up, but he did not. Every time Jeeva did well to her, it reminds her of her ex-husband Prithvi's (Babloo Prithiveeraj) cruelty, and she started to compare them both. In a dramatic flashback, Prithvi is killed (so we think) by Divya when he encourages his friends to sexually abuse her. Believing that the bad time is behind them, Janaki and Divya start a new life in a new town as a mother-daughter team. Divya falls in love with Jeeva with the comedians' help. However, Janaki did not allow Divya to tell Jeeva about her past. The whole colony was cheered by the news, and they arranged an engagement.

Prithvi returns for their betrothal to reclaim his possession. He blackmails Divya to sleep with him on one night before her marriage and asks Jeeva to sanction him a loan of Rs. 25 lakhs; otherwise, he will reveal the truth to everyone. Somehow, Jeeva knows the truth and claimed to be proud to become Divya's husband. This distracts Prithvi, who then decides to stop the marriage. What can a good mother do to stop her evil son? She poisons him and kills herself too for the sake of a peaceful life for her daughter-in-law.

Cast[edit]

Production[edit]

The film progressed after another Tamil film based on the same premise was shelved. The shelved Unnai Vida Maatten by MG Pictures starring Sathyaraj, Abbas, and Rambha, had also been a take on Sleeping with the Enemy (1991).[1] The film's name is based on a song from Nerukku Ner.

Release[edit]

The film released on 15 May 1998. Indolink.com gave the film a positive review citing that "Simran shows she can act too. She is almost getting the correct lip-sync for Tamil dialogues" and "Sujatha is as usual, ready to break into tears at anytime", while "Ajith has very little to do in this female oriented movie". The reviewer added that Prithviraj as the sadist "does a good job, though it looks outrageous."[2]

The producers later worked on a film titled Enna Vilai Azhage in 2000 with Prashanth and Amisha Patel in the lead roles. Despite completing most of the shoot, the makers' financial troubles meant that the project did not release.[3]

Soundtrack[edit]

The film soundtrack features score and 6 songs composed by S. A. Rajkumar who retained the tunes from the original Telugu film which he had composed, with lyrics by Palani Barathi[4]

Track Listing
No. TitleSinger(s) Length
1. "Sikki Mukki"  S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, K. S. Chitra 4:53
2. "Idhu Kaadhalin"  P. Jayachandran 4:19
3. "Kaadhal Enna"  S. P. Balasubrahmanyam 3:53
4. "Ooh Vandhadhu"  Hariharan 4:32
5. "Rukku Rukku"  Mano 4:24
6. "Selaiyile Veedu"  Unni Krishnan, K. S. Chitra 4:29
Total length:
26:30

References[edit]

  1. "A-Z (V)". Indolink Tamil. Archived from the original on 24 April 2013. Retrieved 29 October 2018.
  2. "Aval Varuvala: Movie Review". Indolink Tamil. Archived from the original on 9 December 2017. Retrieved 3 September 2011.
  3. https://web.archive.org/web/20010126223900/http://www.tamilbeat.com/faq/review.htm
  4. "Aval Varuvala Songs". List of Aval Varuvala Songs. Archived from the original on 28 May 2010. Retrieved 27 June 2010.

External links[edit]