Commissioner (film)

Commissioner is a 1994 Indian Malayalam-language neo-noir action thriller film directed by Shaji Kailas, written by Ranji Panicker, and produced by M. Mani. It stars Suresh Gopi as police commissioner Bharathchandran IPS, and also features Ratheesh, Shobana, Vijayaraghavan, M. G. Soman, Rajan P. Dev, K. B. Ganesh Kumar, N. F. Varghese, Karamana Janardanan Nair, and Maniyanpilla Raju in pivotal roles. The background score was composed by Rajamani.

Commissioner
Poster
Directed byShaji Kailas
Written byRanji Panicker
Produced byM. Mani
StarringSuresh Gopi
Ratheesh
Shobana
Vijayaraghavan
M. G. Soman
Rajan P. Dev
K. B. Ganesh Kumar
N. F. Varghese
Karamana Janardanan Nair
Maniyanpilla Raju
CinematographyDinesh Baboo
Edited byL. Bhoominathan
Music byRajamani
Production
company
Sunitha Productions
Distributed byAroma Release
Release date
14 April 1994
Running time
175 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageMalayalam

Commissioner became the highest grossing Malayalam film of 1994, which earned Suresh Gopi the status of an Action Superstar. It is a cult film among Malayali audiences, with several dialogues becoming very famous and remaining so even decades later.[1] The Telugu dubbed version Police Commissioner was also a major commercial success.

The sequel titled Bharath Chandran I.P.S. was released in 2005, directed by Ranji Panicker. In 2012, a crossover film titled The King & the Commissioner, with the characters from The King (1995), Commissioner (1994) and Bharath Chandran I.P.S. (2005) was released, but the film was panned by critics and became a box-office bomb.[2]

Plot

Bharathchandran, an honest but brash police commissioner of Kozhikode, bust a gold smuggling racket at the Calicut docks where he clearly has an issue with authority, and breaths fire each time he encounters a political arm bender like Kunju Moideen Sahib, whose gang was involved in the bust, but his mentor I.G. Balachandran evidently shields him from the wrath of the political brass.

Mohan Thomas is a Delhi-based business tycoon, with strong political clout and a clear sociopathic agenda, who had entrusted Sahib with the gold, which was confiscated by Bharathchandran. Along with gold smuggling, Mohan Thomas is also the leading kingpin of an unholy nexus of politicians, assassins and various officials, including two high ranking cops, I.G. Rajan Felix, Vigilance and A.I.G. Menon, who are involved in criminal activities like instigating communal riotsmoney launderingillegal drug trade and large scale distribution of counterfeit money. Bharathchandran and Mohan Thomas are set on a collision course when Mohan and Co. brutally murder Justice Mahendran, chairman of the Poovanthura commission, possessing evidence that could potentially incriminate Rajan Felix and Menon, for their direct involvement in communal riots at Poovanthura.

Bharathchandran is not only assigned to investigate the homicide but also posted as the police commissioner of Thiruvananthapuram city. Assisted by two dynamic, but brash ASPs Prasad Menon and Mohammed Iqbal, Bharathchandran tries to solve the mystery, but soon to hit a dead-end. Bharathchandran's fiancée Indu, a lawyer, tips him off about the news clip on an assault on a drunk police constable Gopinathan, who also was coincidentally the security for Justice Mahendran. In an attempt to take Sunny, Mohan's younger brother, who had assaulted the constable within the college premises, results in a massive riot as well as a standoff with Rajan Felix, who tries to save Sunny by trying to take him into his custody, claiming previous charges. The only clue that is left with Bharathchandran and crew are based on Vattapara Pithamparan, a trade union leader, who tips-off that Sunny had actually attacked Gopinath because of Gopinath's comment on counterfeit currency.

With this vital clue, Bharathchandran unearths more dirt on Mohan Thomas & Co. Further, Bharathchandran arrests Srilatha Varma, Mohan's legal advisor and mistress, but is brutally murdered in a hotel elevator by Wilfred Vincent Baston, a Goa-based hitman, who had also murdered Justice Mahendran. Bharathchandran is successful in nabbing Antony Ignatius Pimento, Wilfred's right-hand man, and zeroes in on Wilfred. Bharathchandran stages a coup by arresting both Rajan Felix and Menon, who are brutally tortured to reveal details on their alliance with Mohan Thomas and also sheds light on their agenda. Iqbal is killed brutally in an attempt to arrest Wilfred Vincent Baston. This enrages Bharathchandran, who later brutally kills Wilfred and Mohan Thomas at an outhouse by torching the whole house, thus taking the law into his own hands.

Cast

Production

Most of the film was shot extensively in and around Kozhikode and its outskirts. Most of the scenes were shot in the same locations as that of Ekalavyan (1993).[3]

Release

Commissioner was released on April 1994 coinciding the Vishu festival and was a commercial success, where it broke several records.[4][5][6] The film remains an iconic film in Suresh Gopi's career with its audio track and dialogues being high on demand. It also received an A certificate from the Regional Censor board for violence and profanity.

Reception

The film became the highest grossing Malayalam film of 1994. Due to the box office success, the film was soon dubbed into Tamil and Telugu as well. Both these versions went on to become top grosser to the surprise of their distributors. The Telugu version titled Police Commissioner was the most successful among the two. It ran successfully for more than 365 days in theaters across Andhra Pradesh. The Telugu version became a success even in Karnataka.[7][8]

Ashish Rajadhyaksha and Paul Willemen in the book Encyclopedia of Indian Cinema wrote "Suresh Gopi’s performance, embodying the fascist machismo of the honest and committed police officer, made him a Malayalam superstar."[9]

Legacy and Sequels

The characters Bharathchandran IPS and Mohan Thomas portrayed by Suresh Gopi and Ratheesh are considered to be the most iconic characters in Malayalam film industry. A sequel to this film, Bharathchandran I.P.S., was released in 2005, directed by Renji Panicker himself, which was also a commercial success. A crossover film titled The King & the Commissioner was released in 2012, but was declared a box-office bomb.[10]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.