Dhosth (2001 Malayalam film)

Dhosth (transl.Friend) is a 2001 Indian Malayalam-language action thriller film directed by Thulasidas. Dileep and Kunchacko Boban share the title role with Kavya Madhavan, Jagathy Sreekumar and Kalabhavan Mani in supporting roles. It is a remake of Tamil film Kannedhirey Thondrinal (1998).[1][2][3][4] The film was a box office success.[5]

Dhosth
Poster
Directed byThulasidas
Written byUdaykrishna
Siby K. Thomas
Based onKannedhirey Thondrinal (Tamil)
StarringDileep
Kunchacko Boban
CinematographySaloo George
Edited byRanjan Abraham
Music byScore:
S.P. Venkatesh
Songs:
Vidyasagar
Production
company
Kottarakkara Films
Release date
  • 16 August 2001 (2001-08-16)
Running time
140 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageMalayalam

Plot

Vijay, a rich guy, meets a girl Geethu in the Coimbatore railway station while travelling to Chennai to enroll in an engineering college. It is love at first sight for Vijay. Ajith also studies in the same college where Vijay joins and initially both Vijay and Ajith get off on the wrong foot. Geethu is Ajith's sister and without knowing that Vijay conveys his love to her but Geethu does not appear interested and keeps her distance from him.

One day, Vijay saves Ajith's life from a few thugs. After this, they put their differences aside, and become very close friends. On one occasion, Ajith's mother insults Vijay when he comes over and upset, he leaves. In due course, his mother learns about Vijay's good character and becomes very affectionate towards him. Geethu starts to appreciate him and discovers she loves him too.

Before Vijay and Geethu can announce their love to their families, Ajith informs him about a problem that had occurred in his family a few years ago. Ajith has one more sister, who he had never mentioned before. She had eloped with his then close friend on the day of her marriage which left Ajith and his mother broken-hearted. They disowned her, and have not spoken to her since. He sees his then-friend's behavior as a traitorous act.

Now Vijay feels bad about his love towards Geethu and decides not to go ahead with the relationship, fearing that Ajith would interpret it as another betrayal. He sacrifices his love for his friendship with Ajith. Geethu however is unwilling to break off the relationship, and requests him to accept her love on many occasions, to no avail. Her family arranges for her wedding, and desperate, she consumes poison and is taken to the hospital. Vijay rushes to hospital along with his friend where all is revealed. Ajith is proud of his friend and agrees to Vijay and Geethu's marriage.

Cast

Production

It was shot in Ernakulam and nearby places. The campus scenes were shot at Christ College, Irinjalakuda.

Soundtrack

Music: Vidyasagar, Lyrics: S. Ramesan Nair.

Song TitleSingersRaga(s)
"Dosth"S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, Biju Narayanan
"Maari Praave"Malgudi Subha, Balabhaskar
"Manju Pole"Srinivas
"Kilipenne" (male)K. J. YesudasKapi
"Kilipenne" (female)K. S. ChithraKapi
"Kilippenne" (duet)K. J. Yesudas, K. S. ChithraKapi
"Thathamma peru"Sujatha Mohan, K. J. Yesudas

Reception

A critic from keralatalkies.com wrote that "Dosth maintains the traditional superhit outlines of the movies Friends and Niram. Though the young scriptwriter duo of Sibi K Thomas and Udayakrishanan maintain that these resemblances are mere coincidences, the resemblance is too striking to be passed off as commonplace errors".[5] A critic from indiainfo.com wrote that "Among the cast it is Dileep who steals the show as Ajith. Dileep seems very much different in the semi-serious role. Kunchacko Boban as Vijay and Kavya Madhavan as Geethu are very much likely to appeal the youth".[6]

References

  1. "10 Remakes From Other Languages That Worked In Malayalam". Film Companion. 9 August 2021. Retrieved 4 October 2021.
  2. "Malayalam cinema and the multiverse of misogyny". The Indian Express. 9 March 2022. Retrieved 26 April 2022.
  3. "Dileep-Kavya Madhavan Movies In Which They Weren't Paired Opposite Each Other!". Filmibeat.com. 25 November 2016. Retrieved 26 April 2022.
  4. "'Antony' review: This technically strong film needed better writing". The New Indian Express. Retrieved 26 April 2022.
  5. "Dhosth". www.keralatalkies.com. Archived from the original on 22 April 2001. Retrieved 28 September 2022.
  6. "DOSTH: A Film For The Young". indiainfo.com. Archived from the original on 24 September 2022 via Geocities.ws.
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