Sethu (film)

Sethu is a 1999 Indian Tamil-language romantic drama film, written and directed by Bala in his debut. The film stars Vikram and Abitha. The score and soundtrack was composed by Ilaiyaraaja.

Sethu
Theatrical release poster
Directed byBala
Written byBala
Produced byA. Kandasamy
StarringVikram
Abitha
CinematographyR. Rathnavelu
Edited byRaghu Baabu
Music byIlaiyaraaja
Distributed bySharmasha Productions
Release date
  • 10 December 1999 (1999-12-10)
Running time
130 minutes[1]
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Sethu, released on 10 December 1999, initially began running at a single noon show in a suburban theatre, but gradually built up audiences through word-of-mouth publicity. The film ran over 100 days at several theatres, and became Vikram's first major breakthrough film. It won the National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Tamil, and the Best Film category at the Filmfare Awards and the Cinema Express Awards. Bala and Vikram also won several awards for their contributions to the film. The film was remade in Kannada as Huchcha, in Telugu as Seshu, and in Hindi as Tere Naam.

Plot

Sethu, aka Chiyaan, is a rough and macho college student, and the Chairman of the college's Student Union. He deals with people violently and has a bad temper. He lives with his older brother Vasudevan, a court magistrate, and has a troubled relationship with him. His sister-in-law seems to be the only person who understands him.

The movie begins with Sethu winning the Chair of the Students' Union election, followed by celebrations and an on-campus fight between the rival candidates. Sethu is shown to be aggressive and temperamental. He also has an entourage of loyal friends and a strange vagabond lunatic girl who follows around their group. The next day, Sethu and Vasudevan argue over his apparent rowdyism at college, and Sethu storms out of the house. While catching up with his friends at the college entrance, he spots a timid Brahmin girl, Abitha, making her way into the college. He calls her out and mercilessly rags her for fun by asking trivial questions. However, Abitha's innocent nature and soft-spoken responses win his tough exterior and he begins to like her. Unknowingly after the ragging, Abitha drops a peacock feather from her book, which Sethu keeps. He also bumps into her at the temple during his birthday prayers which leads to some lighthearted interaction between the two. Slowly but gradually, Sethu finds himself falling in love with Abitha. His sister-in-law and friends also notice some subtle good changes in him as well. He also begins to admire the peacock feather to remember Abitha. Sethu also helps her by using his college chairman powers to let her sit for an exam entrance for which she was earlier denied.

Concurrently, Abitha's sister returns home in a pitiful state citing dowry-related torture by her husband. She is determined to annul her marriage and stay at home with her child. She unsuccessfully asks a few people for a loan to repay her dowry. Meanwhile, Sethu awkwardly expresses his love to Abitha. However, Abitha is surprised by the proposal as she never had any feelings for him. In a fit of disbelief, she is unable to react properly when Sethu asks if she loves him and Sethu assumes that she reciprocates his love. He also learns of Abitha's would-be fiancé. Displaying a possessive nature, he threatens the fiancé, who is a passive mannered priest, to back off from Abitha. Being fearful, the priest complies.

Subsequently, Abitha openly rejects Sethu when he attempts to present her a gift while catching up with her in a college science lab. She also explains to him that she never had any romantic interest in him. Unable to digest the truth, Sethu aggressively and angrily questions Abitha, causing her to scold him off. Feeling dejected, Sethu spends the night drinking with his friends, who advise him to shed his rowdy image and instead be more timid in front of her to earn his chances back. The next morning, one of Sethu's friends gets thrashed by his rival in college, and Sethu attacks the rival up in retaliation. He continues to throw punches, until he catches the sight of Abitha, who has witnessed the ordeal at the corner. He immediately stops and walks away, feeling a sense of powerlessness to her. His friends, noticing the profound change in him, question him about his loyalties to friendship over his love. They argue in the midst, and one of his friend passes a crude remark about Abitha, causing Sethu to fight him in anger. Realizing that his love is causing him to act rashly, Sethu apologises to his friends and they patch up. However, he still feels heartbroken over Abitha and continues his days thinking about her.

At this point, Sethu is informed by his friend of a brothel racket whose patron had misbehaved with the former's sister outside the brothel. He wastes no time and busts their operations, while beating out the brothel owners and also informing the police. While searching the brothel rooms, he coincidentally bumps into a woman, unaware that she is Abitha's sister. Initially mistaking her for a prostitute, Sethu is scornful towards her. Feeling confused and angered by his remarks, Abitha's sister argues back, explaining to him on her arrangement to collect her dowry loan at the premise. Sethu then soon realises that she is an innocent woman who has been conned into prostitution without her knowledge and learns of her dowry-related torture. While the police arrests the brothel owners and prostitutes, Sethu rescues her discretely from the place by covering her with his jacket and brings her to his bike. Ironically, he also catches sight of Abitha who is amongst the crowd, outside witnessing the police arrest. Abitha also sees him with the covered woman thinking that its a brothel worker, completely unaware that its her sister. Though awkward, Sethu takes off with his bike with the woman seated behind him. Dropping her to safety, Sethu enquires Abitha's sister about her husband's whereabouts. Breaking down, Abitha's sister thanks him for the merciful help and informs Sethu, who then goes off into the night. Meanwhile, Abitha's fiance has witnessed the entire incident, realising the grave help Sethu had just done in rescuing her.

The next day, Sethu travels to the Sub-registrar office and thrashes Abitha's sister's husband. He threatens him to accept his wife back. Learning his lesson, the husband reunites with Abitha's sister. The family feels blissful over the dispute resolution and a joyous Abitha prays at the temple for the good turn of events. However, her fiancé recaps to Abitha and explains Sethu's role on that fateful night her sister was rescued from the brothel. He also explains that Sethu, though rough, is altruistic with a moral compass. He also reminds Abitha that his own profession as a priest would not sustain her married life with him. Acknowledging that he has a heart of gold, Abitha realises Sethu's feelings. However, Sethu acts rashfully and kidnaps Abitha to an abandoned building. In there, he painfully expresses his love and feelings while also berating her for not understanding him. Its a marked change from the usual Sethu that Abitha has seen. Realizing the extent of his love, Abitha finally succumbs to his love. His love finally succeeded, Sethu is ecstatic and daydreams lying on his motorbike until he is suddenly punched in his face..

Just when things seem to have worked well for him, Sethu is viciously attacked by the brothel goons who seek revenge for busting their prostitute racket. Several goons join in and take turns to violently assault him. Sethu is completely overpowered in the fight and is crippled. While he is knocked out to the ground, they drag his body and brutally hit his head into a rock, bloodying it. The severe impact lacerates a part of his brain and it gets torn with critical damage tearing the internal membrane structures and displacing his brain insides, making him go traumatic and lose his sanity with excruciating pain. They then throw his body on top, leaving him in a gory and a gruesome condition.

Sethu is admitted in a mental hospital, where his case is considered hopeless for recovery. The doctors recommend his worried family and friends for Sethu to be sent to a mental asylum at a temple in Yerwadi ashram, where the ayurvedic therapeutic treatment might prove a chance to cure him. Sethu's life is completely flipped upside down as his condition has made him a mental patient, unable to comprehend anything. He is sent to the Yerwadi ashram, where conditions are rather inhumane. He becomes thin and is shaved bald, wearing a tattered shirt and shorts in the ashram. He is also chained to the walls like other mentally ill patients. He undergoes intense treatment at the temple. Meanwhile, Abitha is worried for him as she had yet to hear from him since his injury. Eventually, Sethu's brain heals from its wounds and he recovers back to normal. He tries to persuade the ashram authorities and Swamiji that he is fully recovered and can be released. However, his cries fall on deaf ears and the wardens beat him up. A desperate Sethu attempts to escape from the ashram by climbing over the gates, but he falls unto the sharp points of the gate and obtains serious injuries. At the same time, Abitha is being pressured to marry her fiancé. She is also unable to sacrifice her love for Sethu.

Whilst Sethu is sleeping, Abitha pays him a surprise visit and is distraught to see him in such a condition. As she is about to leave the institution, he wakes up and realises she had come to see him. He calls out, but she leaves unable to hear him as his shouts are drowned by the noises. Determined to meet her, he makes another attempt to escape the institution and this time is successful. His legs still chained and his shirt dirty, he limps his way to Abi's house. When he arrives at her house, he finds marriage decorations at her place. Confused, he limps inside to the house and notices a crowd gathered at the centre. Glancing over, he finally sees Abitha lying on the ground with garlands on her neck with people mourning her: she has killed herself.

Heartbroken, Sethu realises that his efforts have amounted to nothing. Distraught, he steps outs of the house and limps away. His friends and family run over to see him full of tears, but Sethu does not respond nor see them and keeps limping until the ashram wardens come with their van. He has one final last look and walks in to the van. The film ends with Sethu leaving with them as he has nothing left to live for after his true love's death.

Cast

  • Vikram as Sethu a.k.a. Chiyaan
  • Abitha as Abitha Kujalambal (voice dubbed by Savitha Reddy)
  • Sivakumar as Vasudevan
  • Sriman as Das
  • Anju Mahendra as Sethu's friend
  • Sriram as Sriram
  • Vijaya Bharathi (aka Bharathi) as Latha
  • Lavanya as Kamakshi, Abitha's sister
  • Rasheed Ummer as Abitha's brother-in-law
  • Mohan Vaithya as Abitha's uncle
  • Manobala as Tamil Teacher
  • Rajashree as Raji
  • Hemalatha as Vasudevan's daughter
  • Kavitha Tinku as Abitha's friend
  • S. S. Raman as Abitha's father
  • Anwar Alikhan as Brothel goon
  • Jyothi Lakshmi as the old lady dancer in "Gaana Karunkuyile" song
  • Sasikumar as a college student (uncredited role)[2]
  • Ameer as a college student (uncredited role)

Production

After working as an assistant director under Balu Mahendra for seven years, Bala decided to make his directorial debut and wrote a script loosely based on an incident involving of one of his friends who had fallen in love, lost his mind and ended up at a mental asylum.[3] The film was initially titled Akilan but eventually retitled Sethu. Bala offered the lead role of Sethu to his then roommate Vignesh, who did not accept.[4] Murali was also considered, but the role ultimately went to Vikram.[5] Keerthi Reddy was initially signed on as the lead actress, but was later replaced by Rajshri and then subsequently Abitha.[6][7]

To prepare for the character, Vikram shaved his head, thinned down to half his size by losing 21 kilograms and grew out his nails and even exposed himself under the sun for hours for skin darkening as the script demanded it.[8][9][10] Vikram lived off fruit juice for six months, and once he lost the desired weight, he maintained the look by subsisting on a scanty diet: an egg white, one glass of beetroot or carrot juice and a single dry chapatti through the day.[3] Bala did not want Vikram to accept any other offers during this period to maintain the continuity of his looks and asked him to cease working as a dubbing artist. The film's launch was held in April 1997, and production lasted close to two years as the film languished in production hell. The FEFSI strike of 1997 halted filming across the Tamil film industry from June to December 1997, and as a small budget film, Sethu was unable to progress during the period.[3]

When the strike was called off, the producer left the project and Vikram and Bala's assistant, Ameer, pled with the producer to return, with filming resuming in January 1998. After further slow progression, the film was finally completed in June 1999.[3] M. S. Bhaskar lent his voice for S. S. Raman who appeared as a temple priest in this film.[11] Rathnavelu, who worked as a cameraman, said he gave the asylum scenes a predominantly green tone for the intense psychological impact.[12] Vikram has described the period of production as "the worst phase of his career", as he was weak economically, and "his fire was in danger of dying down".[9]

Soundtrack

The music was composed by Ilaiyaraaja.[13][14]

Track listing
No.TitleLyricsSinger(s)Length
1."Enge Sellum Intha"ArivumathiIlaiyaraaja05:07
2."Gaana Karunkuyile"PonnadiyanKovai Kamala05:13
3."Kadhalenna Kadhalenna"Palani BharathiSwarnalatha05:13
4."Maalai En Vethanai"ArivumathiP. Unnikrishnan, Arunmozhi, S. N. Surendar05:04
5."Saranam Bhava" Sujatha01:59
6."Sethuvukku Sethuvukku"Mu. MethaArunmozhi02:27
7."Sikaadha Sitrondru"Palani BharathiP. Unnikrishnan, Arunmozhi, S. N. Surendar05:12
8."Vaarthai Thavari Vittai"ArivumathiIlaiyaraaja03:01
9."Nenachu Nenachu"Mu. MethaP. Unnikrishnan00:47
Total length:34:03

Release

The film struggled to find a distributor and only after sixty-seven screenings did the film manage to find a buyer, with most refusing the film due to its tragic climax.[15] At that time, Bala and Vikram used money from Vikram's wife, Shailaja, to organise press previews. Despite garnering good reviews, no one was interested in purchasing the film and it remained finished but unreleased.[9] The film ultimately released on 10 December 1999,[16] and initially began running at a single noon show in a suburban theatre, but gradually built up audiences through word-of-mouth publicity, becoming a sleeper hit. The film ran over 100 days at several cinema halls across Chennai, with Vikram being mobbed by people on the streets as a result of the film's success.[8]

Reception

Malathi Rangarajan of The Hindu wrote, "AN AWARD winning performance by Vikram, a clear storyline, taut screenplay, powerful dialogues, crisp direction, superb background score - Sethu offers all these and much more".[17] K. N. Vijayan from the New Straits Times described the film as an "unforgettable experience" and described Vikram's performance as "praise-worthy".[18] Kanchana Prakash Rao of Kalki praised the first half but felt the film loses credibility after Sethu gets hurt, panning the film's second half and the ending.[19]

Accolades

Sethu won the National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Tamil, while also securing wins in the Best Film – Tamil category at the Filmfare Awards and the Cinema Express Awards. Bala won the Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Director and the Filmfare Award for Best Director – Tamil. The performance also drew accolades for Vikram who won the Filmfare Special Award – South and the Tamil Nadu State Film Award Special Prize for his portrayal of the title character.[20][21][22] He was reportedly a strong contender for the National Film Award for Best Actor but lost to Mohanlal.[23]

Legacy

Sethu was a milestone in the career of Vikram. The success of the film made Bala one of the most sought after directors in the industry. The film continued the trend of films with themes that focused on realism and nativity. K. Jeshi, a journalist for The Hindu, placed it in the category of films which propagates social issues, like Kaadhal (2004), Veyil (2006), Mozhi (2007) and Paruthiveeran (2007).[24] Post-Sethu, Vikram has said that the film would always remain close to him regardless of its commercial success and that it put him on the "right path", with Vikram choosing to adapt the prefix of Chiyaan to his screen name.[9] Owing to its success, the film was remade in Kannada as Huchcha,[25] in Telugu as Seshu,[26] and in Hindi as Tere Naam.[3]

References

  1. Dhananjayan 2011, p. 212.
  2. "Did you know, Sasikumar appeared in a blink-and-miss part in Vikram's 'Sethu'?". The Times of India. 25 June 2020. Archived from the original on 10 May 2022. Retrieved 10 May 2022.
  3. Rangan, Baradwaj (1 December 2013). "Man of Steel". The Caravan. Archived from the original on 18 September 2015. Retrieved 28 May 2023.
  4. "வாரிசுகளுக்கு மட்டுமே வாய்ப்பு கிடைக்கக் கூடாது! விக்னேஷ் வலியுறுத்துகிறார்". Kungumam (in Tamil). 7 September 2018. Archived from the original on 31 May 2023. Retrieved 31 May 2023.
  5. "Atharva explains why is he indebted to director Bala". News18. 6 December 2012. Archived from the original on 31 May 2023. Retrieved 30 May 2023.
  6. Sandya. "1997–98'ன் கோடம்பாக்கக் குஞ்சுகள்" [1997–98 Kodambakkam babies]. Indolink. Archived from the original on 2 December 1998. Retrieved 22 February 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  7. Sandya. "Tamil Movie News". Indolink. Archived from the original on 30 April 2016. Retrieved 25 November 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  8. Warrier, Shobha (17 August 2004). "Vikram's obsession gets its reward". Rediff.com. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 31 July 2011.
  9. Sivakumar, M. (19 September 2004). "'I am a director's actor'". Frontline. Archived from the original on 7 May 2010. Retrieved 31 July 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  10. "Bala's Sethu". New Tamil Films Online. 26 September 1999. Archived from the original on 6 March 2001. Retrieved 15 May 2021.
  11. "Talent bides its time". The Hindu. 13 November 2009. Archived from the original on 22 February 2022. Retrieved 30 May 2023.
  12. Reddy, T. Krithika (29 November 2014). "Lingaa through Randy's lens". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 28 March 2023. Retrieved 30 May 2023.
  13. "Sethu (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) – EP". Apple Music. 1 January 1999. Archived from the original on 9 January 2023. Retrieved 30 May 2023.
  14. "Mugavari – Sethu – Tamil Audio CD by Ilayaraaja – Deva". Mossymart. Archived from the original on 4 February 2023. Retrieved 30 May 2023.
  15. Kamath, Sudhish (2 January 2003). "Making films for the real world". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 7 June 2013. Retrieved 31 July 2011.
  16. Karthik, Janani (4 August 2016). "People expect me to do something spectacular: Vikram". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 17 August 2016. Retrieved 30 May 2023.
  17. Rangarajan, Malathi (17 December 1999). "Film Reviews: The Haunting / Sethu". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 17 November 2000. Retrieved 27 July 2023.
  18. Vijayan, K. N. (12 February 2000). "Laughs and tears galore in 'Sethu'". New Straits Times. p. 28. Retrieved 30 May 2023.
  19. பிரகாஷ்ராவ், காஞ்சனா (16 January 2000). "சேது". Kalki (in Tamil). p. 130. Archived from the original on 19 June 2023. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  20. Dhananjayan 2011, p. 213.
  21. "Awards: Tamilnadu Government Announces Cinema State Awards -1999". Dinakaran. 29 December 2000. Archived from the original on 22 June 2008. Retrieved 15 August 2023.
  22. Ashok Kumar, S. R. (15 April 2000). "Star-spangled show on cards". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 20 July 2021. Retrieved 20 July 2021.
  23. Rajitha (21 July 2000). "Ajit backs off Nanda". Rediff.com. Archived from the original on 26 October 2012. Retrieved 31 July 2011.
  24. Jeshi, K. (23 November 2007). "Formula is passé, freshness is in". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 30 May 2023. Retrieved 30 May 2023.
  25. "Did you know? Kiccha Sudeep was not the first choice for 'Huccha'". The Times of India. 12 August 2020. Archived from the original on 12 February 2023. Retrieved 31 May 2023.
  26. Tulika (29 April 2002). "Another one bites the dust". Rediff.com. Archived from the original on 2 June 2022. Retrieved 31 May 2023.

Bibliography

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