Really late reviews #1 - Mullum Malarum (Tamil Movie, 1978)



(Mullum Malarum: 1978, directed by Mahendaran, starring Rajnikanth, Shobha, ‘Fatafat’ Jayalakshmi and Saratbabu; music by Ilaiyaraaja; cinematography by Balu Mahendra)
I had watched Mullum Malarum  as a schoolboy. I recall being vowed by the camera work and music. I recall vaguely being impressed by the movie. The songs stuck to memory, with Senthazham Poovil leading the pack. I recall thinking that the movie differed significantly from the source novelette by the same title, written by Umachandran, but don't remember the details.
It was a treat to watch it again.
To set the context, most Tamil movies in the late seventies where prone to overacting and over-the-top emotionalism. MGR had just acted in his last movie (and the movie was so bad that people should have been thankful!). Sivaji Ganesan had been continuing his string of ill-chosen projects. Case in point was Pilot Premnath, an incredibly bad made movie that was released in the same year, 1978. (I personally believed he had completely lost it until he redeemed himself with Mudal Mariyaathai in 1985, and even better, Thevar Magan in 1992 but that is another topic).  Kamalahaasan and Rajnikanth were emerging as the front-line heroes, with movies such as Priya, Bhairavi, Aval appadithan, Sigappu Rojaakal, Shankar-Saleem-Simon, and Ilamai Oojnaladukidadhu. Senior actors such as Muthuraman and Sivakumar were still playing the parts of young men, but struggling to do justice. There were a few movies off the beaten track, such as Jayakanthan's Oru nadigai nadagam parkiral and Aval Appadithan. Rajnikanth was known for his 'style' and action movies, but was mostly playing the bad guy. Kamal Haasan was vacillating between helping senior directors portray tough roles and shallow action-romantic movies.
With most actors and directors coming from the stage background, most movies were dramatic, suffered from verbosity, and underused the visual aspects of storytelling. It's fair to say Mullum malarum came as a breath of fresh air. The movie mixes dialogs and visuals. Balu Mahendra, through his camera, added his own thread to the story. Ilaiyaraaja used a mixture of Carnatic music and folk music for the soundrack, and a novel use of percussion instruments for the background score.
With the benefit of hindsight, I can see that the movie has been a pivotal one in Tamil cinema. Rajnikanth subsequently attained the stardom he seemed destined for. Sarathbabu went on to play the “second hero” for a couple of more decades. Balu Mahendra made his debut as a cinematographer, and went on to several successes with his camera and direction.
The story is of a brother and sister, who are orphaned young, and share a strong bond. Kali (Rajnikanth) is a ruffian, operates a winch in a hill station. He dotes on his sister, Valli . He starts on the wrong foot with his new boss, ‘the engineer’ Kumaran (Saratbabu). The relationship turns sour. Kali gets drunk and loses an arm in an accident; and despite the Kumaran’s efforts to help him, bears a grudge against him.
Valli plays the matchmaker and gets his brother married to Manga, the new settler in the town. Kumaran approaches Kali and asks for Valli’s hand in marriage. Out of spite, Kali refuses and hastily arranges to get his sister married to Murugesan, the local shopkeeper with questionable morals. Manga schemes to get Valli married to Kumaran. The story ends by revealing the decisions of Kali and Valli as to whom the latter ends up marrying. Anything more on the story, I might spoil it for you, so I’ll stop there. 
The story winds around a small town and its occupants, revealing their relationships a bit at a time. The sycophants, the tattle-tellers, newcomers taking their time to find their role in the village, the ruffian and his new boss – all characters are alive, real and almost touchable. Every scene and every dialog makes sense. No scenes inserted to appease the egos of stars. The movie ends at its high point – no anticlimaxes for Mahendran! The remarkable thing was that it was a commercial success as well.
The title of the movie (credit to the author, Umachandran) is a puzzle as well. Did he name his story to talk of a thorn and and a flower, or did he mean to say a thorn could blossom as well?
The climax is one of the most effective, but understated scenes. Both Rajnikanth and Shobha are stunning in the scene. No long dialogs and punch lines. Just two people who show us what normal people might do under difficult circumstances. Does anyone else think the dialog “Yaarunnu nenacha, Vallida!” is the precursor to Rajnikanth’s more recent “Kabalida!”? The new dialog got undeserving social media hype; I don’t recall the old one getting any mention in the reviews.
The subsequent real life successes of Balu Mahendra, Rajnikanth, Ilaiyaraaja and Mahendran were striking; the sad stories of the leading ladies were even more remarkable.
Shobha, the teenage acting sensation, stole the show. She held her own against Rajnikanth and the slightly more seasoned ‘Fatafat’ Jayalakshmi. As a contrast to most movies of that era when women in twenties or thirties played schoolgirls, here was a movie which cast a teenager for the role of a teenage sister devoted to her older-brother. What a novel idea! Shobha is brilliant in portraying her happiness, despair at her brother’s misfortunes and the conflict between her love for her brother and ‘the engineer’. Sadly, she didn’t have too many years after the movie. She passed away in 1981. She was 17.
‘Fatafat’ Jayalakshmi shines in a strong cast of actors, effortlessly portraying the transition from a happy-go-lucky glutton to the defiant housewife, doing the right thing regardless of what might happen to her marriage. Stunning performance! Sadly, she too, passed away in 1980.
Ilaiyaraaja, despite his sterling work, had courted some controversy with this movie. Padma Subramanyam, the Bharatanatyam dancer, accused him of stealing the tune from her dance-drama for the prelude of the soundtrack ‘Raman andalum’. I believe Ilaiyaraaja's position is that he composed the ballad for Padma’s dance-drama.
Coming back to the movie, I believe this is the movie that made Rajnikanth. And his best movie to date. If his recent films are any indication, he is unlikely to get close to beating it. If you haven’t watched the movie, watch it!


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