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Paadum Vaanampadi

1985 Tamil dance musical film by M. Jayakumar From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Paadum Vaanampadi
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Paadum Vaanampadi (transl.Singing skylark) is a 1985 Indian Tamil-language dance film released in 1985 produced by K. R. Cine Arts starring newcomer Anand Babu, Jeevitha and Nagesh. The film was the Tamil remake of the Hindi film Disco Dancer.[1] It was released on 24 February 1985,[2] and became a blockbuster hit and ran for more than one hundred days at Chennai and other centres.[3] Music was by Bappi Lahiri and Shankar–Ganesh.

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Plot

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Even as a young child, Anand is the sole provider for his family consisting of his widowed mother and younger sister, Viji. His older brother Raja ran away from home unable to bear the humiliation after their father was falsely accused of theft and sent to jail by his boss Dharmalingam. Anand is a street performer that sings with his mentor, Muthu. He befriends Radha, Dharmalingam's daughter, during a performance. Upset over the friendship, Dharmalingam has Anand's mother arrested on a false charge. The impoverished family leaves the city in disgrace.

Years later, Dharmalingam's son Shyam is a famous disco dancer that's let his fame go to his head. He clashes with his manager Raja and fires him. Raja is determined to find another dancer to unseat Shyam. He sees Anand dancing in the street and quickly raises him to be more popular than Shyam. Raja also discovers that Anand is his younger brother and the fractured family is reunited. Anand also reunites with Radha and the two fall in love. An increasingly frustrated Shyam sets out to woo Viji in an attempt to get revenge on Raja and Anand. Dharmalingam is also out for revenge after his ill-dealing of the family is made public. Dharmalingam and Shyam create chaos the siblings must deal with to succeed.

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Cast

Soundtrack

Soundtrack was composed by Bappi Lahiri and Shankar–Ganesh.[4][5] The highlight of the album is the disco song "Naanoru Disco Dancer",[6][7] which was based on "I Am A Disco Dancer" from Disco Dancer (1982).[citation needed] "Aatathil Naanthaan Raja Raja" is a cover of "Video Killed the Radio Star".[citation needed]

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Reception

Kalki criticised the film for having too many stunt sequences, but said the scene where a monkey trains Anand Babu in stunts was first class.[8]

References

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