Peraanmai
Peraanmai is a 2009 Indian Tamil-language, action-adventure film that was directed by S. P. Jhananathan and produced by Ayngaran International. The film stars Ravi Mohan, Vasundhara, Saranya, Liyasree, Dhansika and Varsha Ashwathi. It follows a National [Cadet Corps (India)|National Cadet Corps] trainer and five cadets seeking to thwart a group of foreign mercenaries planning to stop a scientific research project by destroying a rocket launcher.
The core plot of Peraanmai is loosely based on the 1972 Soviet Union|Soviet] film The [Dawns Here Are Quiet (1972 film)|The Dawns Here Are Quiet]. Filming took place between March 2008 and April 2009, and the film was released in theatres on 16 October 2009, coinciding with the festival of Diwali.
Plot
Duruvan is a trainer at a National Cadet Corps camp for women cadets. His superior ranger Ganapathiram berates Duruvan for his caste and rough persona, and the latter is blamed for inappropriate acts by other cadets. However, Victoria, their warden, sympathises with Duruvan. Duruvan selects female cadets Kalpana, Ajitha, Susheela, Jennifer, and Thulas for an expedition. As a practical joke, the women complain to Ganapathiram, claiming they do not feel safe with Duruvan. During the expedition, whilst Duruvan is caught up in procedures at a forest checkpost, the women buy condoms and other inappropriate items, start the jeep, and drive it down a hill. After losing the vehicle, the troop decides to stay in the forest for the night and return by an alternative route the next morning. The women start to bond with Duruvan. Kalpana sees two foreigners with advanced armaments in the Indian forest; Duruvan guesses they are heading towards an Indian satellite research station to destroy a rocket-launching project. He realises the foreigners will take five hours to reach the banks of Toonghum Lake. Duruvan knows a better route to the opposite bank that can be reached in 4.5 hours. He tells the women to inform Ganapathiram about them and bring extra forces, but the women disagree and go with Duruvan. They reach the opposite bank and find that there are 16 mercenaries.Duruvan realises the mercenaries plan to sabotage the space mission and makes plans to defeat them. He sends Ajitha to inform Indian officials, and the other women remain with him. Whilst en route, Ajitha gets trapped in quicksand and dies. Duruvan uses his navigational skills to place the troop ahead of the mercenaries and later obstructs their movement by cutting trees to distract them. Anderson, the leader of the foreign mercenary group, decides to stay back until a clear notion from the opposite side. He deploys two of his men to investigate the situation, but Duruvan kills both of them. Anderson sends three men – Thompson, George, and Edwin – to the opposite side to find out what happened to the two men; Duruvan's troops are waiting for them to collect their armaments. Duruvan kills George and Edwin, but Thompson escapes. When Anderson finds he has lost four men, he decides to kill his opponent.
Duruvan's troops plant the landmines they acquired from one of the dead mercenaries, and another of the mercenaries steps on a landmine and dies. This scares the mercenaries, and Anderson and Benny decide to search for the remaining landmines, while the others set up a camp there. That night, Dhuruvan and his troops break into the mercenaries' camp, kill two men, and seize one of their two boxes, expecting it to contain information about the air missile. The next morning, Anderson and Benny find two men dead and one box missing. Anderson tells Benny to take three men to the site of the rocket launch and launch the missile. Anderson takes the rest of his men to destroy Duruvan and the women, and a battle ensues.
On the other side, Ganapathiram finds the complaint letter, gathers his team, and goes to the forest checkpoint to find out what happened. The storekeeper tells him what happened and that condoms were purchased. Assuming Duruvan has kidnapped the women, Ganapathiram and his officers destroy Duruvan's community and homes and exile them from the area while insulting their lower-caste status. He finds Ajitha's corpse in the quicksand and assumes Duruvan raped and killed her. Ganapathiram describes Duruvan as a serial killer to the district collector, who, with Ganapathiram's permission, issues a shoot-at-sight order for Duruvan.
Duruvan and the women kill three of the mercenaries. Benny tells his fellow mercenary Collin to stay and guard the missile-containing box whilst they go to help Anderson in the battle. After finding their secret signal, Anderson kills Susheela and hangs her from a tree, and Duruvan and the women bury her body. The women kill Thompson and two more mercenaries, leaving only Anderson, Benny, and Collin. Benny finds Duruvan and the women, but Duruvan captures him and forces him to lure Anderson, after which Duruvan and the women kill Benny. Duruvan goes in search of Anderson whilst the women go to stop the missile launch. Ganapathiram finds Duruvan and tries to shoot him. Duruvan tries but fails to reveal the situation. Using his two-way radio, Ganapathiram tries to order his men to kill Duruvan. Duruvan throws away the walkie-talkie, beats Ganapathiram, and escapes. When Ganapathiram goes to retrieve the walkie-talkie, he sees the mercenaries' corpses and realizes that Duruvan killed them. Ganapathiram reveals the situation to the collector.
Duruvan and Anderson fight face-to-face; Duruvan confronts and defeats Anderson, and the women kill Collin and try to disarm the counter missile from firing the space rocket. After an intense fight, Duruvan kills Anderson. Duruvan reaches the site of the rocket launch and helps the women; he increases the missile's timer by 25 seconds and diverts it to the left. The Indian space rocket launches and climbs into the atmosphere. After 25 seconds, the counter missile explodes in the forest. The troop congratulates itself but feels bad for Duruvan, whose bravery will never be recognized due to his caste. The Government of India awards Ganapathiram for bravery, whilst Duruvan returns to the camp to train another set of new NCC cadets. The women bid a tearful goodbye, remembering Ajitha and Susheela.
Cast
Production
had the idea for Peraanmai before he made his debut. The film is Dhanshika's first notable role in a Tamil film, and she was cast after Jananathan saw her family at a convention. This is also the film debut of models Liyasree and Varsha Ashwathi. Ravi Mohan underwent physical training for the lead role; this included avoiding oil, rice and salt for over a year. He shed of weight in 22 days. He also took a course in weaponry. Filming began on 5 March 2008 at Mancholai, Papanasam and Ambasamudram. The set for Ravi's village was built at a dense forest of Ambasamudram. Roland Kickinger worked on the film, which was also shot in Kerala, for twenty days. Filming ended in April 2009.Soundtrack
The music for Peraanmai was composed by Vidyasagar, and Vairamuthu wrote the lyrics. The audio was released at Sathyam Cinemas on 21 September 2009. Pavithra Srinivasan of Rediff.com wrote: "In most of the songs, Vidhyasagar has slipped into a familiar template, so it is worth just one listen".Release and reception
Peraanmai was released on 16 October 2009, Diwali day. Producers Ayngaran International distributed the film themselves. Sify wrote: "Here is a definitive movie with a moral framework, and commitment along with a stunning and realistic climax", and also praising Ravi's acting. Pavithra Srinivasan of Rediff.com wrote: "A movie like this thrives on characters that knock against each other, and new emotions emerge but S P Jhananathan has thrust so many platitudes, morals and politics into it that it ends up being inadvertently hilarious. It's a script that looks good only on paper, filled with good intentions but hopelessly flawed."Bhama Devi Ravi of The Times of India wrote: "if you are one of those passionate followers of Tamil cinema, and get all twitchy and charged up over the sameness in formula-driven action films and have been demanding at least a fresh storyline as a minimum requirement to escape a sense of deja vu, you can relax. Peraanmai, which attempts to offer that difference, is a refreshing change". Malathi Rangarajan of The Hindu wrote: "Despite the scepticism you feel, and the initial slowness, Peraanmai promises thrilling action in the second half", lauding the stuntwork and Ravi's performance.
A critic from The New Indian Express, wrote: "The director can be lauded for experimenting with different genres, and for his effort to deviate from the routine formula elements. But while Peraanmai can be a stepping stone for further such ventures, it also reveals that our filmmakers have a long way to go, before they can successfully execute such complex plots on screen." A critic from Deccan Herald wrote: "A tad tedious in the first half, Peraanmai gains pace post interval with a scintillating climax". A critic from Ananda Vikatan rated the film 48 out of 100, and wrote it deserves a respectable honour for its attempt to take Tamil cinema in a new direction.