Love Today (1997 film)

Love Today is a 1997 Indian Tamil-language romantic drama film written and directed by Balasekaran, who made his debut with the venture. This film stars Vijay, Suvalakshmi and Manthra while Raghuvaran, Karan and Sriman all play other supporting roles. The film received positive reviews from critics and was very successful at the box office. The film ran for over 175 days. It was remade in Telugu as Suswagatham, in Kannada as Majnu, and in Hindi as Kya Yehi Pyaar Hai.

Love Today
Poster
Directed byBalasekaran
Written byBalasekaran
Produced byR. B. Choudary
StarringVijay
Suvalakshmi
Manthra
CinematographyVijay Gopal
Edited byV. Jaishanker
Music byShiva
Production
company
Release date
9 May 1997
Running time
150 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil
Budget3.2 crore

Plot

Ganesh is a college graduate who lives with his father Chandrasekhar, a doctor. Chandrasekhar is easygoing and pampers Ganesh with whatever he wants. Sandhya is the daughter of a very strict police inspector Vasudevan, who is always suspicious that she would have a love affair. Sandhya makes up her mind that she would never fall in love, and her ambition is to get a gold medal in her college degree. One day, Ganesh spots Sandhya and falls in love with her at first sight. Even though Sandhya catches a good glimpse of him, she tells her friend Fathima that she likes no one. Ganesh goes to the bus stop everyday to see Sandhya. He tries to get advice from his friends Ravi and Peter to convince Sandhya to marry him. Their advice goes in vain as she does not care about him. She confronts Ganesh one day and tells him not to waste his time on her.

Ganesh gets hold of Sandhya's friend Preethi, and she tries to talk to Sandhya, but she is unmovable. Vasudevan becomes suspicious of Ganesh and Sandhya and uses physical force on Ganesh. He also verbally abuses Sandhya, though she tries to explain her innocence. Sandhya is forced to leave town because of this. Ganesh finds her whereabouts and leaves his father to go out of town and find her. As he is trying to find her, Chandrasekhar has an accident and passes away. His friends desperately try to find his whereabouts but cannot trace him. Peter ends up performing Chandrasekhar's last rites. Ganesh arrives and gets heartbroken that he could not even perform his father's cremation.

At this point, Sandhya reveals her feelings for Ganesh, tells him that she loves him, and says she wants to spend the rest of her life with him. However, he rejects her feelings and tells her he had lost everything because of falling in love and that he couldn't even do his father's last rites, therefore she is not worth it. Nevertheless, the following day, Sandhya is seen standing at the bus stop, waiting for Ganesh to come. Meanwhile, Ganesh takes the recommendation that his father had written for him before his death and goes for his first interview.

Cast

Production

In an interview during the release, Vijay mentioned that he signed the film to give the audience what they want — fights, fast songs and a message, mentioning he had similar success from Poove Unakkaga (1996).[1]

Soundtrack

The soundtrack is composed by newcomer Shiva. His real name was Omar and he earlier composed an album.[2] The song "Enna Azhagu" was reused by Shiva in the 2001 Telugu film Priyamaina Neeku as "Nelanadiga Puvvulanadiga" also produced by R. B. Choudary and directed by Balasekaran.

Track listing
No.TitleLyricsArtist(s)Length
1."Yen Pennendru" (duet)VairamuthuMohammed Aslam, Bombay Jayashri05:22
2."Yen Pennendru" (solo)VairamuthuP. Unni Krishnan04:05
3."Enna Azhagu Ethanai Azhagu"VairamuthuS. P. Balasubrahmanyam04:57
4."Kuppayi Kuppayi"SelvanYugendran02:37
5."Aalai Ethikinu Ooru Suthum Pallavan"VairamuthuMano, Kalpana04:53
6."Salamiya"VaasanMano, Malgudi Subha05:12
7."Monica Monica"'Pattukottai' Shanmuga Sundaram.Suresh Peters, Febi Mani04:41
Total length:30:27

Reception

Ananda Vikatan rated the film 42 out of 100.[3] The film became one of several successful films in the romantic genre which Vijay featured in throughout the late 1990s.[4] The success of the film prompted the director and actor to come together again immediately for a film titled Priyamudan, however the title was later used by Vijay for a different project.[5]

Remakes

Year Film Language Ref.
1998 Suswagatham Telugu [6]
2002 Majanu Kannada [7]
2002 Kya Yehi Pyaar Hai Hindi [8]

References

  1. Umashanker, Sudha (19 February 1999). "Spelling success in a short span". The Hindu. Retrieved 31 July 2023.
  2. "Tamil Movie News--Pudhu Edition 1". Google Groups. 7 January 1997. Retrieved 31 July 2023.
  3. சார்லஸ், தேவன் (22 June 2021). "பீஸ்ட் : 'நாளைய தீர்ப்பு' டு `மாஸ்டர்'... விஜய்க்கு விகடனின் மார்க்கும், விமர்சனமும் என்ன? #Beast". Ananda Vikatan (in Tamil). Archived from the original on 8 October 2021. Retrieved 7 December 2021.
  4. Rangarajan, Malathi (22 January 2011). "Bodyguard in form". The Hindu. Retrieved 22 April 2012.
  5. "1997-98 Kodambakkam babies Page: Part 2". Indolink.com. Archived from the original on 24 July 2012. Retrieved 22 April 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  6. "Valentine's Day 2021: 'RX 100' to 'Omkaram', Telugu films on the dark side of love". The Times of India. 12 February 2021. Retrieved 7 December 2021.
  7. "Chitraloka.com". 20 November 2001. Archived from the original on 20 November 2001.
  8. Shukl, Pankaj. "ONE MORE REMAKE FILM FAILS TO LIVE UP TO THE EXPECTATIONS". smashits.com. Archived from the original on 19 May 2014. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.