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*[[Ravi Mariya]] as Ravi
*[[Ravi Mariya]] as Ravi
*[[Raghava Lawrence]] in a special appearance
*[[Raghava Lawrence]] in a special appearance
*[[Vindhya (actress)|Vindhya]] in a special appearance
*[[Vindhya (actress)|Vindhya]] in a [[item number|special appearance]]
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Revision as of 19:16, 23 September 2018

Aasai Aasaiyai
Directed byRavi Mariya
Written byRavi Mariya
Produced byR. B. Choudary
StarringJiiva
Sharmelee
Santhoshi
Livingston
Ramesh Khanna
Anandaraj
Edited byJayshanker
Music byMani Sharma
Release date
31 January 2003
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Aasai Aasaiyai is an Indian Tamil language romantic film directed by Ravi Mariya. This film was the debut of famous producer R.B Choudary's second son, Jiiva. The female lead role was done by Sharmelee. The music was composed by Mani Sharma. This is the golden jubilee of "Super Good Films" movie production company. Song lyrics were penned by Vairamuthu and Ravi Mariya.

Plot

The story revolves around Vinod (Jiiva), who aspires to become a businessman after completing his bachelors. His parents keep nudging him to start working in a job. He also works part-time as a private detective. He is assigned a detective job to follow a girl and find out her general activities and also if she is in love with anyone. While doing this job, he eventually falls in love with the girl Brinda (Sharmelee) and quits his detective job. Brinda, who is the daughter of a rich gold seller, has a strict policy in her life to not love anyone because her sister eloped with another guy in the past and her father (Nasser) had suffered a heart attack. The crux is how Jiiva wins Brinda's heart and how they convince their parents to accept their marriage, forms rest of the story.

Cast

Soundtracks

  1. Ilamai Enbathu (Vairamuthu)
  2. Jinu Jinu (Ravimariya)
  3. Kannam Sivakka (Vairamuthu)
  4. Kathal Oru (Vairamuthu)
  5. Theeppori Pondrathu (Vairamuthu)
  6. Hey Penne (Vairamuthu)

Reception

Balaji Balasubramaniam of bbthots.com said that the film, "has all the aforementioned characteristics but unfortunately, is also needlessly vulgar in its portrayal of romance" and added that "Jeeva delivers a good performance. [...] Sharmilee is a tad below him in terms of performance but isn't particularly bad either. But the debutante comedian is irritating and never funny".[1] Malathi Rangarajan of The Hindu said, "Jerks in the narration and unexplained sequences make certain situations appear distorted [...] Nearly every Mani Sharma number reminds you of an old song" and concluded, "Supergood Films could have surely done better in its 50th venture".[2] Sify wrote, "The story, screenplay, dialogues and direction are credited to debutant Ravi Mariya, but sadly the film fails to impress. The film is a rehash of many love stories in the past including Fazil's Kadhalukku Mariyadhai" and added, "The debutant boy Jeeva is cool and has done his homework well. He proves to be star material while TV anchor Sharmilee is disappointing".[3] Another critic noted, "This isn't an instant movie classic, but then it surely ain't as bad as the majority of critics want you to believe either. Instead one should relax and enjoy".[4]

References

  1. ^ Balaji Balasubramaniam. "AASAI AASAIYAAI". bbthots.com. Retrieved 28 May 2018.
  2. ^ Malathi Rangarajan (7 February 2003). "The Hindu : Aasai Aasaiyai". The Hindu. Retrieved 28 May 2018.
  3. ^ "Review : Aasai Aasaiyai". Sify. 7 February 2003. Retrieved 28 May 2018.
  4. ^ "BizHat.com - Aasai Aasaiyai Review". movies.bizhat.com. Retrieved 28 May 2018.