Chocolate (2001 film)

Chocolate

DVD Cover
Directed by A. Venkatesh
Produced by R. Madhesh
Written by Pattukkottai Prabakar
(Dialogue)
Screenplay by A. Venkatesh
Story by R. Madhesh
Starring Prashanth
Jaya Re
Mumtaj
Suhasini Mani Ratnam
Livingston
Music by Deva
Cinematography S.D. Vijay Milton
Edited by B. Lenin
V. T. Vijayan
Production
company
Distributed by Movie Magic
Release dates
  • 7 September 2001 (2001-09-07)
Country India
Language Tamil

Chocolate is a 2001 Tamil film directed by A. Venkatesh alone written and produced by R. Madhesh. Featuring Prashanth and Jaya Re in the lead roles, the film also has Livingston, Suhasini, Mumtaj and Nagendra Prasad in supporting roles, while the film's score and soundtrack are composed by Deva. The film opened to a positive response at the box office in September 2001.[1]

Plot

Aravind (Prashanth) meets Anjali (Jaya Re) & falls in love at first sight without knowing her background. When this two meets Anjali tells Aravind that she would like to go for a trial-romance for a week, which might lead to a long-term romance, for which Aravind agrees.

Meanwhile, Anjali is the daughter of Jayachandran (Livingston) – (the Commissioner of Police) & Saradha (Suhasini). Aravind maintains a cordial acquaintance with both of them, not knowing that Anjali is their daughter. Anjali acknowledges them as her parents. Jayachandran convinces Anjali to dispense with this trial romance, & make a deeper commitment as he finds Aravind a gentleman. Aravind convinces Anjali's mother Saradha to support him as her suitor and so Saradha makes Aravind marry Anjali .

Cast

Production

The film began production in January 2001 and scenes were shot at Mayajaal for three days later that month.[2] At an official launch event held soon afterwards, producer R. Madhesh donated seventy five kilogrammes of chocolate to poor children, equivalent to the weight of the film's actor Prashanth. Richa Pallod was initially considered to play the heroine, though her high remuneration meant that the makers signed on Jaya Re, a former Miss Goa pageant winner.[3] A fight scene was shot at Koyambedu Market Road near Chennai with 16 cameras, while a song was shot on a cruise ship between Cambodia and Vietnam.[4]

Release

The film opened to mixed reviews in September 2001, after having an initial premiere at Bay Area, San Francisco. A critic from Sify.com noted "The film tantalises in the beginning only to loose its fizz halfway through", adding "our heart goes straight out to Prashanth who despite the odds, comes up with a decent performance."[5] Malathi Rangarajan of The Hindu reviewed the film and added that "this youthful bonanza gets stretched, testing one's patience towards the end, none but the screenplay is to blame."[6] Rediff.com meanwhile gave the film a negative review noting "Matters are built towards a loud, dramatic, implausible climax. This one's a mess and what you keep wondering is why an accomplished actress like Suhasini Mani Rathnam had to make this the vehicle for one of her rare celluloid appearances."[7] A critic from Cinesouth.com noted "The film is bubbling with youthful feelings. It contains some admirable scenes also. Thus, movie manages to make its mark with a lot difficulties."[8]

The film was later dubbed and released in Telugu in March 2002 with the same name and won positive reviews from critics.[9] The success of the film led Prashanth and A. Venkatesh re-unite and announced a project called "Petrol" in 2005[10][11] but Prashanth's marital problems eventually led to delays in the director's schedule and the film remains uncompleted.[12]

Music

The film features song composed by Deva. Producer R. Madhesh opted against having a traditional audio cassette release function and chose to distribute the cassettes to music shops enclosed with Cadbury chocolate.Lyrics by Vaali[13]

Chocolate
Soundtrack album by Deva
Released July 2001
Genre Feature film soundtrack
Label The Best Audio
Track Song Singer(s)
1 "Anjumani" Mathangi
2 "Chocolate"
3 "Dhuryodhana Dhuryodhana" Shankar Mahadevan, Mahalakshmi Iyer
4 "Hosima Hosima" Devan Ekambaram, Anupama
5 "Kappaleh Kappaleh" Hariharan, Mahalakshmi Iyer
6 "Kokaragiri" Sabesh-Murali, Mathangi
7 "Malai Malai" Anuradha Sriram, A. R. Reihana
8 "En Nizhalai " Srikanth, Timmy, Mathangi
9 "Oru Five Star Paarvai" Niruban

References

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