Indira Vizha

Indira Vizha
Directed by K. Rajeshwar
Produced by Ashok K. Kotwani
Written by K. Rajeswar
Starring Srikanth
Shruti Marathe
Namitha
Ragasya
Nassar
Vivek
Music by Yadheesh
Cinematography Jey Camil Alex
Edited by RaghuBob
Distributed by ANKK Movies
Release dates
  • 10 July 2009 (2009-07-10)
Country India
Language Tamil

Indira Vizha (2009) is a Tamil film directed by film director, K. Rajeshwar starring Srikanth and Namitha in the lead roles. It began its first schedule on 11 February 2008.[1] The film was released on Friday, 10 July 2009. It is loosely based on the Hollywood movie Disclosure. There were some claims that this movie is inspired from Bollywood hit Aitraaz.

Plot

The movie revolves around sexual harassment occurring at work. This movie is loosely based on the Hollywood movie "Disclosure" starring Michael Douglas and Demi Moore. The film is the story of Kamini (Namitha) getting back at her ex lover Santhosh (Srikanth) by reentering his life as the wife of his boss, played by Nasser. Srikanth plays the creative head of a television channel Teen TV (though it does indulge in political exposes), who is married to debutant Hemamalini.

His life turns topsy-turvy when Nasser reinstates Namitha as the head of the TV channel, a promotion Srikanth anticipated for himself. Following this, it is the simple story with Namitha hurling sexual harassment accusations at him.

Cast

Actor Role
Srikanth Santhosh Srinivasan
Namitha Kamini
Sruthi Prakash Savithri Duraisimaalu
Nasser John Kumaramangalam
Vivek Oppilla Mani
Ragasya Stella
Radha Ravi Judge sattanaathan
Y. G. Mahendran Advocate

Production

Noted actor, Raghuvaran, died during the production of the movie; the film became his final film that he had signed up and completed a photo shoot for. He was replaced by actor Nassar.[2]

Soundtrack

Soundtrack was composed by debutant Yathish Mahadev and lyrics by Vairamuthu.[3]

Reception

Behindwoods wrote "Indira Vizha is a movie that might leave one feeling despondent about the fact that even while brave film makers are coming out with neat and quality movies, such products find their way into theaters."[4] Times of India wrote "With so much meat, all you need is a simple, no-nonsense screenplay. However, the director changes track frequently, delving into comedy which is as crisp as yesterday's papadam left on the dining table."[5] The Hindu wrote "An ably fractured screenplay leaves Indira Vizha tottering even before it can take off."[6]

References


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