Vaai Kozhuppu

Vaai Kozhuppu
Poster
Directed byMuktha Srinivasan
Written byBabu-Gopu (dialogues)
Screenplay byMuktha Srinivasan
Produced byRamaswamy Govind
StarringPandiarajan
Gautami
Janagaraj
S. S. Chandran
CinematographyMuktha S. Sundar
Edited byV. P. Krishnan
Music byChandrabose
Production
company
Mukthaa Films
Release date
  • 17 February 1989 (1989-02-17)
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Vaai Kozhuppu (transl. Loud Mouth) is a 1989 Indian Tamil-language comedy thriller film, directed by Muktha Srinivasan and produced by Ramaswamy Govind and Muktha S. Ravi. The film stars Pandiarajan, Gautami, Janagaraj and S. S. Chandran. It was released on 17 February 1989.[1]

Plot

Murthy and Baskar are Chokkalingam's sons-in-law. Murthy cunningly squanders Chokkalingam's wealth, deflecting blame onto Baskar, the younger son-in-law. To deflect these accusations, Baskar devises a plan to find a suitable groom for Usha, his youngest sister-in-law, hoping the newcomer can expose Murthy's true intentions to their family. Vasu, a resourceful and witty individual, agrees to Baskar's scheme. He begins wooing Usha, who aspires to become a newsreader. Baskar introduces Vasu to Usha, presenting him as a television channel employee. The two spend time together, develop feelings, and their marriage is soon arranged. After the wedding, Vasu moves into his father-in-law's home. Initially, Murthy plots to eliminate Vasu by assigning him to collect overdue rent from the notorious Vinayaga colony. However, Vasu bravely confronts the goons, successfully retrieving the outstanding rents.

Meanwhile, Vasu's father weds Banaganapalli Mangamma, a Telugu-speaking sweeper woman. Murthy brings Vasu's father and stepmother Mangamma into their home, intending to stir trouble and Mangamma's relatives follow, irritating Chokkalingam. Murthy further fuels tension by bringing the TV station head, who exposes Vasu's false employment claims, driving a wedge between Vasu and Usha. However, Usha soon grasps Vasu and Baskar's true intentions and reconciles with Vasu. Chokkalingam suffers a fatal heart attack. His will reveals that all properties and wealth transfer to Murthy, his elder son-in-law. Vasu and Baskar are outraged; Vasu impulsively declares to the lawyer that they'll murder Murthy to reclaim the properties. With Murthy now the sole owner, Vasu and Baskar must vacate the house. They purchase a rope from a street vendor, intending to strangle Murthy.

Upon arriving at a cottage where Murthy frequently visits, they're stunned to find him dead, exactly as they had planned. As they flee, Murali witnesses their escape. The police launch an investigation, and careless remarks by Vasu's father and Mangamma, combined with statements from the lawyer, Murali, and the street vendor, spark a manhunt for Vasu and Baskar. Secretly, the duo meets their wives at a temple and professes their innocence. Vasu narrowly evades Inspector Ramani. With a bounty on their heads, they flee across various locations, narrowly escaping the lawyer and street vendor at a hotel. The pair reaches a liquor shop, gets intoxicated, and escapes as police arrive. They return to Murthy's house, where their wives urge them to uncover the true killer. However, Vasu and Baskar shift suspicion onto each other. Kalpana, Baskar's wife, reports Vasu as the murderer to the police, who arrive at the house. Disguised as police officers, Vasu and Baskar escape after attacking them. While in disguise, This leads them to confront illicit liquor manufacturers, and they escape in a van driven by Murali.

They follow Murali to a house where Shanthi is being held captive, whose photo they had already seen in the wallet Baskar took from the crime scene. Through Murali and Shanthi's conversation, they learn that Sugavanam, Murali's boss and Grand Hotel proprietor, lies comatose, and Shanthi is imprisoned for knowing a crucial secret. Vasu and Baskar retrieve a photo from Shanthi's house, revealing Sugavanam's fake coma. They investigate Grand Hotel, where the manager discloses Shanthi's illicit affair with Sugavanam. A hotel photo shows Shanthi wearing a ring identical to their family's, leading Vasu and Baskar to deduce that Sugavanam, enamored with Shanthi, murdered Murthy due to his relationship with her.

Murali captures and rigs Vasu and Baskar with bombs, but they narrowly escape. Disguised as nurses, they infiltrate the hospital, where police and Vasu's parents are present. Vasu and Baskar attempt to expose Sugavanam's fake coma but fail. Vasu initiates a bomb hoax, evacuating the hospital. Sugavanam flees, attacking Vasu, but Vasu apprehends Sugavanam and Murali after an intense car chase and physical confrontation. Shanthi confesses that Murali overheard Vasu and Baskar's angry plans to kill Murthy, exploiting the opportunity to commit the murder and frame them. Exonerated, Vasu and Baskar are hailed as heroes for solving the murder case.

Cast

Production

Vaai Kozhuppu is Pandiarajan's second collaboration with Srinivasan after Katha Nayagan (1988).[2]

Soundtrack

Soundtrack was composed by Chandrabose. Lyrics were written by Vairamuthu.[3]

Track listing
No.TitleSinger(s)Length
1."Pappa Sabhayil"Vani Jairam 
2."Mulichi Mulichi"Mano 
3."Ponnamma"Mano, Lalitha Sagari 
4."Edhedho Karpanai"T. L. Thyagarajan, Lalitha Sagari 
5."Vaai Kozhuppu"Chandrabose 

Reception

The Indian Express wrote, "Gopu-Babu's dialogues follow the stageplay formula of a joke a minute and Janakaraj's bent in this enterprise and Pandyaraj's easy manner put Vaay Kozhuppu out of trouble's way".[4]

References

  1. ^ "வாய் கொழுப்பு / Vaai Kozhuppu (1989)". Screen 4 Screen. Archived from the original on 20 November 2023. Retrieved 8 February 2023.
  2. ^ Subhakeerthana, S.; Rajendran, Gopinath (31 May 2018). "Obituary | 'A people's person': Tamil film fraternity remember late director Muktha Srinivasan". The New Indian Express. Archived from the original on 10 November 2022. Retrieved 6 May 2024.
  3. ^ "Vaikkozhuppu and En Kanavar Tamil Film LP Vinyl Record". Mossymart. Archived from the original on 8 February 2023. Retrieved 8 February 2023.
  4. ^ "Vaaykozhuppu". The Indian Express. 3 March 1989. p. 5. Retrieved 11 January 2019 – via Google News Archive.