Naan Avanillai (1974 film)


Naan Avanillai is a 1974 Indian Tamil-language film starring Gemini Ganesan in the lead role. Produced by Ganesan himself, it was directed by K. Balachander. It was adapted from the 1962 Marathi language play To Mee Navhech, written by Pralhad Keshav Atre. The film deals with a man who woos and marries several women while he takes on as many different identities.
Naan Avanillai was released on 7 June 1974. The film was not commercially successful, but received critical acclaim, and Ganesan's performance won him the Filmfare Award for Best Tamil Actor. It was later remade into a 2007 Tamil film with the same title and a 2008 Kannada film titled Buddhivantha.

Plot

portrays a modern-day Don Juan who woos and marries several women while he takes on as many different identities. He is ultimately taken to court, but no-one is able to deduce his true identity as he speaks several languages with great facility. In the jail, the police inspector slaps him, believing he would utter something in his mother tongue when taken by surprise and this Indian exclaims in Chinese! In the final scene a man who maintains that the hero or villain is his brother Fernandez stabs him. Our Don Juan makes a sign of the cross before he dies. This film is remarkable in being unusual for a Tamil film of that era.

Cast

Naan Avanillai was adapted from the 1962 Marathi play To Mee Navhech, written by Pralhad Keshav Atre. K. Balachander directed the film adaptation with Gemini Ganesan as the male lead. Ganesan also produced the film under his newly inaugurated Shri Narayani Films, this being his only production.

Soundtrack

The music was composed by M. S. Viswanathan.

Release and reception

Naan Avanillai was released on 7 June 1974. The film was dubbed Telugu-language as "Srungara Leela" and released on 17 December 1976. The film and Ganesan's performance received critical acclaim, but failed commercially. For his performance, Ganesan won the Filmfare Award for Best Tamil Actor. Ganesan's daughter Rekha, despite her strained relationship with her father, praised his performance, saying, "You've acted well, daddy." The film later attained cult status in Tamil cinema for its witty dialogues, the screenplay and the "complete change of image" for Ganesan. Writing for Business Standard in 2011, Suveen K. Sinha called Naan Avanillai "arguably the most memorable film of his career".

Remakes

Naan Avanillai was remade in the same language under same title in 2007, which became a box office success. A Kannada remake, Buddhivantha, was released in 2008.