Oppam
Oppam | |
---|---|
Directed by | Priyadarshan |
Screenplay by | Priyadarshan |
Story by | Govind Vijayan (credited for "story idea") |
Produced by | Antony Perumbavoor |
Starring |
|
Cinematography | N. K. Ekambaram |
Edited by | M. S. Ayyappan Nair |
Music by | Songs: 4 Musics Score: Ron Ethan Yohann |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Maxlab Cinemas and Entertainments |
Release date |
|
Running time | 157 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Malayalam |
Box office | est.₹65 crores [1] |
Oppam (transl. Along) is a 2016 Indian
Regular collaborators Mohanlal and Priyadarshan were expected to work on a film in 2015, but it was postponed before
Oppam was released in India on 8 September 2016 and internationally on 21 September 2016 where it received generally positive reviews from critics with praise for Mohanlal's performance and script. The film performed really well at the box office earning above ₹52 crores worldwide. It became the third-highest-grossing Malayalam film of all time and the second-highest-grossing Malayalam film of the year, behind Pulimurugan.[2] At the Filmfare Awards South, the film was nominated in five categories (including Best Film, Best Director for Priyadarshan and Best Actor for Mohanlal) and won in the categories of Best Lyricist (for Madhu Vasudevan) and Best Male Playback Singer (for M. G. Sreekumar). It was dubbed and released in Telugu as Kanupapa on 3 February 2017, and in Hindi as Prime Witness. It was remade in Kannada in 2019 as Kavacha.
Plot
Jayaraman was born
As a result, Vasu's family poisoned themselves. Vasu becomes an insane with grief, resolves to avenge his loss and tells Krishnamoorthy that he will kill him and his family. Vasu has been released from prison, and Krishnamoorthy feels threatened. Krishnamoorthy has a young daughter, Nandini, and is afraid that Vasu will kill her if he learns of her existence. To keep her safe, he sent her to a convent school and she knows nothing about him. Nandini's only link to her father is via Jayaraman, who frequently visits her at Krishnamoorthy's request. She asks Jayaraman about her father at each visit, and he replies that he will bring him the next time. Krishnamoorthy asks Jayaraman to help him transfer money from his bank account to another account he opened for Nandini.
To reduce scrutiny, they avoid an
They learn at the police station that Devayani's brother had the money, but Jayaraman is charged with murder. He vainly pleads for a chance to find the killer, whose presence he could sense. After Jayaraman is beaten by the police during an interrogation, he fights back and escapes. He tries to hide Nandini from Vasu with the aid of his officer friend Ganga. Jayaraman reveals to Ganga that Nandini is actually Vasu's daughter, whom the serial killer is trying to kill. He, Nandini and Ganga hide in the convent under the Mother Superior's supervision. However, Vasu arrives and attacks Ganga. Jayaraman tries to reveal that Nandini is Vasu's daughter, which she hears and becomes shocked. But Vasu believes that it as an emotional blackmail to save Nandini. Vasu tries all his way to kill Nandini but Jayaraman saves her. Jayaraman tells Nandini that she isn't actually Vasu's daughter and he told that to fool him. Suddenly when Vasu approaches Nandini, Jayaraman calls Vasu in his mobile phone. When the ringtone is heard, Jayaraman kills Vasu. In the end, Jayaraman and Nandini beginning a life together as a loving father and daughter.
Cast
- lift operatorin an apartment building
- Samuthirakani as Vasudevan, a serial killer
- Meenakshias Nandini, Vasudevan's daughter and Jayaraman's foster daughter
- Nedumudi Venu as Krishnamoorthy, former Supreme Court Justice
- ACP Ganga IPS
- Vimala Raman as Devayani, apartment maid
- Mamukkoya as Kunju "Kunjikka" Mohammad, security guard
- City Police Commissioner P. Padmakumar IPS
- CIAnandhan.R
- Innocent as Madhavan, Jayaraman's uncle
- Hareesh Kanaran as Veeran, security guard
- Police constableMadhu, Devayani's ex-husband
- Kaviyoor Ponnamma as Jayaraman's aunt
- Kunchan as Narendran, Ganga's grand father
- Idavela Babuas Swaminathan, apartment resident and Krishnamoorthy's nephew
- Aju Varghese as "Maala" Babu, auto-driver
- Krishna Prasad as Raghavan, apartment resident
- Manikuttan as Devayani's brother
- Arjun Nandhakumar as Ravi, apartment resident
- Kalasala Babu as R. K. Menon, apartment resident
- Devshi Khanduri as Sardarji's daughter and Ravi's Fiancée
- Sona Heiden as Sardarji's wife
- Kozhikode Narayanan Nair as Pillai, shopkeeper
- Sreelatha Namboothiri as Krishnamoorthy's sister
- Balaji Sharma as SISugunan
- Chethan Jayalal as the janitor boy
- Anjali Nair as Lakshmi, Jayaraman's sister
- Bineesh Kodiyeri as Kannan, Jayaraman's brother
- ACP George IPS
- Sasi Kalinga as Varghese Mappila, money loaner
- Suchitra Pillai as Alphonsa, school principal
- Siddique as Bappootty, Jayaraman's friend (cameo appearance)
- Antony Perumbavoor as Boat passenger (cameo appearance)
Production
Development
According to Priyadarshan, he was in a traumatic state after separating from his wife Lissy; he "couldn't think straight" and felt he had lost his "ability to make films". Mohanlal encouraged him to return to work, but "not with another comedy" (on which they had frequently collaborated).[3] They were scheduled to work on an untitled, multilingual film in late 2015. The principal photography, expected to begin in September, was first postponed until March 2016 and never begun due to unfavourable weather in Russia (where the film was set). Priyadarshan decided to go ahead with a new project, and began reading screenplays; the director also had a two-month commitment from Mohanlal because of the other film.[4]
He chose a script by November, and it was reported that filming would begin in January 2016; Mohanlal would join the set after finishing his commitment to Janatha Garage.[5] In December, it was reported that filming would tentatively begin in February.[6] In the same month, the film's title was announced; Priyadarshan would take over the screenplay, based on a story by Govind Vijayan. The film was reported to be a thriller, with Mohanlal playing a blind man falsely accused of murder. Priyadarshan described it as a "cat-and-mouse game" with a "little bit of humour too". Ooty and Kochi were scheduled as the primary filming locations.[7]
Oppam was conceived as a crime thriller and developed from the gist of a short story by Vijayan.[8][9] Mohanlal discovered the story and sent it to Priyadarshan. When the director pointed out several logical errors in the story, Mohanlal asked if he could rework it into a screenplay.[10] Priyadarshan was intrigued by its premise of a blind man witnessing a murder.[11] After spending a month working on it, Priyadarshan told Mohanlal that it can be made into a film and took two more months to draft a screenplay.[12] According to the director, Oppam was the most challenging screenplay he had written to date.[8] Priyadarshan said in January that filming would begin on 20 February,[13] but in February he was still working on the screenplay's final draft and casting.[14]
Although it was reported in December 2015 that G. P. Vijayakumar would produce Oppam for Seven Arts International,[15] the film was produced by Antony Perumbavoor through his company, Aashirvad Cinemas.[16] Director I. V. Sasi's son, Ani, was an associate director, and Priyadarshan's son Sidharth was an unofficial assistant director.[17] In a later interview, in 2019, Priyadarshan said that Mohanlal had contemplated on directing Oppam (which would have been his directorial debut) but later he decided against it.[18]
Casting
Priyadarshan tailored the lead character, Jayaraman, for Mohanlal (his regular collaborator) when he wrote the screenplay. Tamil actor Samuthirakani was cast after Mohanlal in December 2015, with the rest of the cast and crew yet to be finalised.[7] Vijay Menon dubbed for Samuthirakani's character.[19] Even though Mohanlal has acted temporarily blinded characters, Oppam was the first film in which he played a blind character throughout the film.[20] Mohanlal told Priyadarshan that he would not act like a stereotypical blind man (blinking and look up), but like a sighted person. They had visited a school for the blind in Chennai for pre-production research, and saw children playing and running between obstacles as if they could see. Priyadarshan had also known blind men whose other senses were keen.[11] The character of Jayaraman has exceptionally sharp senses, and an expert in martial art of kalaripayattu.[21]
In a January
In February,
Filming
Oppam began
The crew resumed filming in Kochi and in and around Ernakulam district in May 2016.[47][48] Some scenes were shot at Fort Kochi,[49] and tharavad scenes were filmed in Chottanikkara.[34] Additional filming was done in Pullikkanam and Kanjar in Idukki district, where Mohanlal joined the set for a 10-day shooting schedule.[50] Filming was done at Vagamon during the second week of May.[51] Oppam's fight scenes were coordinated by Stunt Silva.[52]
Filming moved to Ooty in Tamil Nadu in the first week of June.[53] Priyadarshan considers Ooty a lucky charm, since it was a location for some of his successful films. He recreated a frame from the 1986 film, Thalavattam, (his first film in Ooty) in the song "Minungum Minnaminuge".[54] Using the same camera lens used in Thalavattam, it was filmed in School Manth (where the song "Ponveene", from Thalavattam, was shot). Mohanlal and Meenakshi appeared in the frame which featured Mohanlal and Lissy in the original.[55]
After Ooty, there was a two-day schedule at
Post-production
Music
The film's six-song soundtrack was composed by 4 Musics (a group consisting of Jim Jacob, Biby Matthew, Eldhose Alias, and Justin James) in their second composition after Just Married (2015), whereas the background score was contributed by Ron Ethan Yohann in his Malayalam-film debut.[62] The soundtrack was recorded, mixed and mastered at Jacob's Noise Headquarters in Kochi during December 2015, and completed within late-July 2016.[65][66] The soundtrack album was released on the Satyam Audios label on 17 August 2016,[67] and was positively received by critics with the songs: "Chinnamma Adi" and "Minungum Minnaminuge" being successful and among the most-viewed Malayalam video songs in YouTube.[68][69]
Release
Oppam's theatrical release was announced along with its first poster in March 2016, scheduled for the festival of Onam in September.[16] At his request, a special showing was arranged for the actor Rajinikanth at his Chennai home a day before the film's general release.[70][71] Oppam was released in India on 8 September 2016 by Maxlab Cinemas and Entertainments on 104 screens across Kerala,[72] and the film opened internationally on 21 September. In Europe, it was scheduled for a limited release on 14 September by PJ Entertainments and a general release on 23 September.[73] The release was postponed until 21 September due to a censorship issue, and advance booking began on 19 September. The film was released on 119 screens in the United Kingdom and Ireland on 23 September, the widest release there for a Malayalam film.[74]
In November 2016, Priyadarshan said that the film would be
Marketing
In May 2016, Mohanlal and Priyadarshan produced and released a
Reception
Box office
The film grossed ₹1.56 crore on its opening day at the Kerala box office, topping parallel releases
Oppam was the fastest film to earn ₹20 crore in Kerala (11 days).[87] By grossing over ₹25 crore on day 17 it became the highest-grossing film of the year at the Kerala box office, passing Jacobinte Swargarajyam.[88] Within 22 days it crossed the ₹30 crore mark, the fastest film to do so in Kerala.[89][90][91] The film's worldwide total was ₹35 crore at 31 days, with ₹22.75 crore from Kerala.[87] The film grossed ₹42 crore worldwide, Oppam was the second-highest-grossing Malayalam film of the year (behind Pulimurugan), with box-office earnings of over ₹30 crore in Kerala box office.[92] The film ran for over 125 days in Kerala theatres,[93][94]
Oppam grossed ₹8.31 crore overseas in Gulf Cooperation Council territories in 10 days.[95] The film grossed £45,371 in its opening weekend (23 – 25 September) from 74 British theatres, the fourth-best foreign opener that weekend.[96][97] It grossed £84,185 in four weekends from the United Kingdom and Ireland regions.[98] In the United States, it earned US$44,790 in the opening weekend (30 September – 2 October) from 16 screens,[99] and US$94,466 in four weekends.[100]
Critical reception
Oppam received generally positive responses from critics.[101] G. Ragesh of Malayala Manorama gave Oppam three-and-a-half out of five stars, he said it is a carefully crafted and well-made thriller with some "edge-of-the-seat moments". Ragesh found Mohanlal's portrayal of Jayaraman the best part of the film (which "celebrates the natural actor that Mohanlal is"), and praised the "perfectly choreographed" action scenes.[102] A Sify critic called it an engaging film and wrote: "Oppam is based on a script which is fine at best. But it is the slick presentation and of course, a brilliant performance from Mohanlal that overcomes its minor weaknesses" and adding, "It is the stellar performance from Mohanlal that adds to the merits of this thriller in a crucial way". The critic gave Samuthirakani a special mention.[103]
The Indian Express's Goutham V. S. gave Oppam three out of five stars, and opined that the film is engaging and have an interesting plot that brings back the vintage Mohanlal-Priyadarshan combo. "Watching Mohanlal as Jayaraman, one is reminded of the skill set this actor possesses. He seamlessly becomes his character and so smooth is the transition that you forget the effort that must have gone into it". He praised the cinematography and score that "maintain a tensed mood as the intriguing hide-and-seek between the protagonist and antagonist plays out".[104] Also giving the film three out of five stars, Deepa Soman of The Times of India wrote: "Oppam has a few elements to create some entertainingly 'tensed' moments through its length, but it's not one of those gripping thrillers that leave you content when you leave the hall". Soman enjoyed the songs that she felt suit the situations well, and are engaging.[105]
For Rediff.com, Paresh C. Palicha wrote: "It's an interesting film with the basics of the typical Priyadarshan films remaining in place ... the biggest positive about Oppam is that Mohanlal gives more sharpness and detailing to the writing and direction with his extraordinary performance and that makes the film a must watch". He gave it 2.5 out of five stars.[106] Srivatsan of India Today wrote, "Oppam, on many levels, is solid at its core. Unlike many commercial entertainers, the film is formulaic ... what's intriguing is the director's treatment of the subject". He praised Mohanlal's performance and the film's score and songs, giving it two-and-a-half out of five stars.[107]
Anu James of the International Business Times called Oppam "a winner all the way": "The movie offers some edge-of-the-seat moments with an engaging narrative. Even though the culprit is revealed in the first half of the thriller, the movie doesn't let you get bored" and said the direction and screenplay are impressive. She praised Mohanlal's performance and the songs, cinematography, and editing and added that even with a predictable plot and few questions that might leave the audience confused, "the many positive aspects of the movie make the negatives fade away".[46] For The News Minute, Sowmya Rajendran wrote: "Mohanlal nails the role of a blind man in this well-executed thriller" and also noted the performances of the rest of the cast. Although the film "keeps you interested till the end, the plot somewhat loses steam in the second half".[108]
Awards
Oppam received six nominations at the 64th Filmfare Awards South and won two awards for the song "Chinnamma Adi"—Sreekumar won the award for playback singing, and Vasudhevan for lyrics. The film received six nominations at the 6th South Indian International Movie Awards, but did not win in any category. Menon who dubbed for Samuthirakani's voice won an award for dubbing at the 47th Kerala State Film Awards. Oppam was not eligible for the 64th National Film Awards, since Priyadarshan chaired the year's award jury.[109]
Award | Date of ceremony | Category | Nominee(s) | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Asianet Film Awards | 20 January 2017 | Best Film | Antony Perumbavoor, Priyadarshan | Won | [110] |
Best Actor | Mohanlal | Won | |||
Best Music Director | 4 Musics | Won | |||
Best Lyricist | B. K. Harinarayanan | Won | |||
Asiavision Awards | 18 November 2016 | Best Director | Priyadarshan | Won | [111] |
Outstanding Movie of the Year | Priyadarshan | Won | |||
Popular Actor of the Year | Mohanlal | Won | |||
Best Singer – Male | M. G. Sreekumar (for "Chinnamma Adi") | Won | |||
Best Lyricist | B. K. Harinarayanan | Won | |||
New Sensation in Singing | Sreya Jayadeep | Won | |||
Filmfare Awards South | 17 June 2017 | Best Film – Malayalam | Oppam | Nominated | [112] |
Best Director – Malayalam | Priyadarshan | Nominated | |||
Best Actor – Malayalam | Mohanlal | Nominated | |||
Best Lyricist – Malayalam | Madhu Vasudevan (for "Chinnamma Adi")
|
Won | |||
B. K. Harinarayanan (for "Minungum Minnaminuge") | Nominated | ||||
Best Male Playback Singer – Malayalam | M. G. Sreekumar (for "Chinnamma Adi") | Won | |||
IIFA Utsavam | 28 – 29 March 2017 | Performance in a Leading Role – Male | Mohanlal | Nominated | [113] |
Performance in a Leading Role – Female | Anusree | Nominated | |||
Direction | Priyadarshan | Nominated | |||
Performance in a Negative Role | Samuthirakani | Nominated | |||
Music Direction | 4 Musics | Nominated | |||
Playback Singer – Female | Sreya Jayadeep | Won | |||
Kerala Film Critics Association Awards | 2 March 2018 | Best Film | Oppam | Won | [114] |
Best Director | Priyadarshan | Won | |||
Best Actor | Mohanlal | Won | |||
Special Jury Award | Samuthirakani | Won | |||
Kerala State Film Awards | 10 September 2017 | Best Dubbing Artist | Vijay Menon (dubbed for Samuthirakani) | Won | [19] |
South Indian International Movie Awards | 30 June 2017 | Best Film | Aashirvad Cinemas | Nominated | [115] |
Best Director | Priyadarshan | Nominated | |||
Best Actor in a Negative Role | Samuthirakani | Nominated | |||
Best Lyricist | B. K. Harinarayanan (for "Minungum Minnaminuge") | Nominated | |||
Best Playback Singer (Male) | M. G. Sreekumar (for "Chinnamma Adi") | Nominated | |||
Best Playback Singer (Female) | Sreya Jayadeep (for "Minungum Minnaminuge") | Nominated | |||
Vanitha Film Awards | 12 February 2017 | Best Actor | Mohanlal | Won | [44] |
Popular Actress | Anusree | Won | |||
Best Male Singer | M. G. Sreekumar (for "Chinnamma Adi") | Won | |||
Best Choreographer | Kala | Won |
Remake
In June 2016, two months before Oppam's release, Priyadarshan told
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