Uttharavindri Ulle Vaa

Uttharavindri Ulle Vaa (transl. Come inside without permission) is a 1971 Indian Tamil-language romantic comedy film, directed by N. S. Chakravarthi in his debut, produced by Sridhar and written by Gopu. The film features an ensemble cast including Ravichandran, Nagesh, Thengai Srinivasan, Moorthy, Mali, Kanchana, Rama Prabha, Sachu, Sundari Bai and Vijaya Chandrika.[2] It was remade in Telugu as Vintha Illu Santha Gola (1976).[citation needed]

Uttharavindri Ulle Vaa
Poster
Directed byN. C. Chakravarthi
Screenplay byGopu
Produced bySridhar
StarringRavichandran
Nagesh
Thengai Srinivasan
Moorthy
Mali
Kanchana
Rama Prabha
Sachu
Sundari Bai
Vijaya Chandrika
CinematographyB. S. Lokanath
Edited byN. M. Shankar
Music byM. S. Viswanathan
Production
company
Release date
  • 14 January 1971 (1971-01-14)[1]
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Plot

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Ravi lives in a bungalow that is bought by his father recently, so that Ravi can study in the city. Ravi stays with his three other bachelor friends, Mani, Raju and Mahalingam alias Mali. Raju works in a sports store which is a mundane job. Mani works as an assistant manager in a company while Mali works as a mechanic. When Ravi gets his collage leave for a week, the 4 friends plan to go on a vacation to Ooty. The three working friends cook up story to attain leave and succeed. The night prior to their planned trip, a woman comes and hides in their house. When the guys find her, she simply says that she is trying to protect herself. Ravi allows her to stay in his house for the time being and cancels the trip.

All 4 of them falls for the woman, Janaki and tries to make themselves good in front of her. They also come to a deal that if she falls for any one of them, the other 3 should give way to which all agree. They do various stuff to impress her. But Janaki falls for Ravi. One night, they all hear a child crying outside their house. An a one-year-old girl is found alone with a letter addressed to Mahalingam. It said that its from Sharadha, a woman that Mahalingam has cheated and the child is his. Mahalingam denies knowing such a woman but no one trusts him. The take in the child regardless, and name her Shanti. Ravi and Janaki's love deepens.

One day, while Raju is travelling in a bus, a woman follows him all the way home and addresses him as Nadha (Old fashioned style to call a lover boy or husband). Shocked, Raju informs his friends. Shortly, the woman's mother, Sivagami comes to the house too and settles there. She informs the rest that her daughter, Andal met with an accident recently and had gotten the memories of her past life. In her previous birth, she was married to Raju. Raju hates her constant urging romance. In the meantime, Ravi's father pays a visit but the guys carry it forward in a smooth manner.

To prevent anything worse from happening, they plan to bring in a psychiatrist, Dr. Swaminathan to cure Andal. Swami is assisted by his nurse daughter, Sarasa. Janaki sees Swami and gets shocked, and so does he. Sarasa and Mani fall in love. Swami tells Mani that he had seen Janaki in a brothel when he went to attend a patient. Mani gets shocked and informs Mali and Raju. Janaki overhears this and leaves the house. When Mani tells Ravi about this, Ravi gets angry at him and goes to find Janaki.

Meanwhile, Raju brings Andal on his bike for a ride, as a treatment suggested by Swami. He hits a woman and she falls unconscious and so does Andal. Raju is arrested for the same. The woman's handbag is taken by the police and Raju sees the picture of Baby Shanti and a threatening letter from Mahalingam. Raju says that it's his friend Mali. Mali too gets arrested for threatening the woman. It is also revealed that the woman is Sharadha and the child is hers. Both Sharadha and Andal gets conscious and Sharadha leaves for the police station to meet her child. Andal gets her memories back. At the station it is revealed that Mali is not the Mahalingam that Sharadha intended to give the child to. It happened that before Ravi's father bought the house, a man named Mahalingam lived in the house and he was the one who cheated Sharadha. He turns out to be a criminal who is on the run.

Janaki, gets cornered by criminal Mahalingam and it turns out that he was the one who forced her to be a prostitute and she ran away and hid in Ravi's house, bringing back her intro in this film. Ravi fights the bad guys and rescues Janaki. Ravi's father also gets to know about it. In the end, Ravi marries Janaki, Raju marries Andal and Mani marries Sarasa.

Cast

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Male cast
Female cast
Supporting cast
  • Veera Raghavan as Ravi's father
  • Baby Shanthi

Production

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Sridhar's directorial Dharti failed at the box office, which led his production company Chithralaya to suffer losses. To compensate for the losses, Sridhar decided to do two projects at the same time, which became Avalukendru Or Manam and Uttharavindri Ulle Vaa.[3] Unlike his previous films under Chithralaya where he only directed, for this film Sridhar only worked as producer while giving directorial responsibilities to his associate N. C. Chakravarthi who made his debut with this film. The film's screenplay was written by Gopu.[3][4]

Soundtrack

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Music was composed by M. S. Viswanathan and lyrics were written by Kannadasan.[5][6] According to Scroll writer Sruthisagar Yamunan, the song "Madhamo Aavani Mangaiyo", sung by S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, was proof of the singer's command over sangadhis, despite his lack of formal training in classical music.[7] The song "Kadhal Kadhal Endru" is set in Dharmavati raga.[8]

Song Singers Length
"Utharavindri Ulle Vaa" L. R. Eswari, T. M. Soundararajan, S. P. Balasubrahmanyam 04:38
"Madhamo Aavani Mangaiyo" S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, P. Susheela 04:19
"Unnai Thoduvathu Iniyathu" S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, P. Susheela, Saibaba, L. R. Eswari 05:25
"Kaadhal Kaadhal Endru Pesa" P. Susheela, M. L. Srikanth 04:47
"Theanaatrangaraiyinile" L. R. Eswari 03:24

References

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  1. ^ "உத்தரவின்றி உள்ளே வா / Uttharavindri Ulle Vaa (1971)". Screen 4 Screen. Archived from the original on 29 November 2023. Retrieved 21 June 2022.
  2. ^ Guy, Randor (8 January 2017). "Uttharavindri Ulle Vaa (1970) TAMIL". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 8 January 2017. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
  3. ^ a b ஸ்ரீதர், டைரக்டர் (9 August 1992). "மோதிர கையால் ஒரு குட்டு". Kalki (in Tamil). pp. 50–51. Archived from the original on 13 November 2023. Retrieved 15 December 2022 – via Internet Archive.
  4. ^ ஸ்ரீதர், டைரக்டர் (16 August 1992). "எனக்கென்றும் ஓர் மனம்" [A mind of my own]. Kalki (in Tamil). pp. 52–53. Archived from the original on 29 January 2023. Retrieved 15 December 2022 – via Internet Archive.
  5. ^ "Utharavindri Ulle Va Tamil Film EP Vinyl Record by M S Viswanathan". Macsendisk. Archived from the original on 21 June 2022. Retrieved 21 June 2022.
  6. ^ "Utharavindri Ulle Vaa". Saregama. Archived from the original on 4 June 2016. Retrieved 17 May 2016.
  7. ^ Yamunan, Sruthisagar (13 November 2016). "SP Balasubrahmanyam's staggering achievement: 40,000 tracks, 50 years later, numerous languages". Scroll.in. Archived from the original on 12 November 2021. Retrieved 11 February 2021.
  8. ^ "ஏழிசை எம்எஸ்வி | பயோகிராபி". Dinamalar (in Tamil). Archived from the original on 26 June 2020. Retrieved 7 July 2024.
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