Mundhinam Paartheney
Mundhinam Paartheney (transl. Saw you the day before) is a 2010 Indian Tamil-language romantic comedy film written and directed by debutant director Magizh Thirumeni, starring Sanjay, Ekta Khosla, Lizna, Pooja B. and Sai Prashanth in the lead roles. The film, produced by Manickam Narayanan's Seventh Channel Communications, released on 19 March 2010. The film's title is inspired by a song from Vaaranam Aayiram (2008).[1] Plot
The story unfolds in London, where Sanjay, narrates about his 'kind' of girl, and talks about love. Cut to flashback, the hero meets Pooja. He repeatedly tries to impress her. But he learns that she plans to marry a NRI youth. Then comes Aarthi, a dance tutor. She is a girl with traditional ideas but a modern outlook. Unfortunately, the hero's attempts to settle down with her gets jinxed. Then enters Anu, Sanjay's colleague. How he tries to woo her forms the rest of the story. Cast
ProductionSanjay Vellanki made his Tamil film debut in the role of a software professional.[2] Ekta Khosla also made her Tamil debut with the film and plays a salsa dance instructor.[3] Theatre artist Lizna made her debut with this film as one of the heroines.[citation needed] Newcomer Lakshmi Priyaa Chandramouli played a supporting role in the film and shot for the film for ten days.[4] A song choreographed by Ramash was shot on Khosla with Thota Tharani handling the art direction.[5] The song "Maya" was shot at White Cliffs of Dover and Dover Castle.[6] SoundtrackThe music was composed by S. Thaman and was released on Sony Music India. Karthik Srinivasan from Milliblog wrote that "After last year’s Eeram, Thaman displays tremendous confidence and delivers a sweet whopper!"[7]
ReceptionPavithra Srinivasan of Rediff.com wrote "It might not be a slam-bang action movie with twists at every turn but Mundhinam Parthene is fairly accurate, humorous portrayal of life in a certain section of the society, deftly told. Definitely worth a watch".[8] Gautaman Bhaskaran from Hindustan Times wrote "Mundhinam Paartheney is sadly, a good theme that has not been crafted with care. Indeed, a classic case of an interesting plot spoilt by an awful narrative style".[9] A critic from Sify wrote "Magilzh Thirumeni, who has graduated from Gautham Vasudeva Menon School of filmmaking, has come out with flying colors as an independent director with Mundhinam Paartheney. It has a captivating freshness about it though there is nothing new in the story".[10] Malathi Rangarajan from The Hindu wrote that "The screenplay presents much scope for director Magilzh Thirumeni to infuse scenes with a surfeit of sexual overtones. Yet he exercises restraint and comes out with a natural, underplayed fare".[11] R. S. Prakash from Bangalore Mirror wrote that "It's a film that's an easy watch across an audience categories devoid of unnecessary elements in the name of commercial musts".[3] References
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