Uthama Puthiran (1958 film)


Uthama Puthiran is a 1958 Indian Tamil-language historical action film directed by T. Prakash Rao. Co-produced by C. V. Sridhar, who also wrote the screenplay, it is a remake of the 1940 Tamil film of the same name, and also adapts from The Man in the Iron Mask, the third part of the 1847–1850 novel by Alexandre Dumas. The film stars Sivaji Ganesan and Padmini, with M. K. Radha, M. N. Nambiar, K. A. Thangavelu, Ragini and Kannamba in supporting roles. It is the first film to feature Ganesan in two distinct roles.
Uthama Puthiran is the story of a queen who gives birth to twins. But one of the twins is forcefully abandoned and grows up elsewhere. He grows up as a kind and honest man, while the other twin grows up as a greedy and arrogant man. When fate brings both the twins together and they start fighting, it is only their mother who can bring peace. The film was released on 7 February 1958, and became a major commercial success, with a theatrical run of over 100 days. It was also dubbed in Telugu as Veera Prathap and in Hindi as Sitamgar.

Plot

The queen of Malarpuri delivers a male child. Her brother Naganathan replaces it with a dead child, and informs king Varaguna Pandiyan that the newborn is dead. To Naganathan's surprise, the queen gives birth to another boy soon after. Minister Gunaseelar arrives by then and the king is informed of the birth of two children, one dead and one alive. Everyone is happy that at least one is alive. Naganathan decides to kill the first infant and hands it over to his servant Somappa. However, Somappa and his wife raise the prince in a forest.
The crown prince is Vikraman and his identical twin in the forest is Parthiban. On his deathbed, the king appoints Naganathan as the guardian of crown prince Vikraman, and gives the order that Naganathan would be solely responsible for Vikraman's safety. To achieve his objective of ruling the country, Naganathan brings up Vikraman with all vices and does not allow him to bond with his mother. On the other hand, Parthiban grows up to become a valiant warrior under the guidance of Somappa and fights for the public.
After the king's death, Vikraman ascends the throne and hands over administrative controls to Naganathan, who indulges in all kind of looting by levying more taxes. Parthiban comes out of forest and saves the minister's daughter Amudhavalli "Amudha", when her chariot goes out of control. They fall in love, and he starts visiting her palace late in the night. Amudha encounters Vikraman, who looks similar to Parthiban, but does not disclose this to anyone. Vikraman likes her and tells Naganathan to fix his marriage with her. Amudha does not accept when Vikraman's mother comes with the proposal.
One night, the soldiers notice Parthiban getting into the palace and they reach Amudha's room. She makes him escape by making him wear Vikraman's costume. While leaving, he meets his mother, but pretends to be Vikraman. When he is talking to her, Vikraman arrives and they scuffle. Parthiban escapes, but when he comes again to meet Amudha, he is thrown into prison.
Through the maidservant, the queen learns that Parthiban is also her son. She goes to the prison and orders his release. By then, Vikraman arrives with Naganathan, who confirms they are brothers, but states that the kingdom cannot afford to have two brothers fighting for power. Vikraman does not wish to share the kingdom and to avoid anyone recognising him, orders that Parthiban be masked and imprisoned. Parthiban has an iron mask locked on his face; its key is with Vikraman.
Amudha and Parthiban's friend Ponnan hatch a plan to rescue Parthiban. Amudha makes Vikraman insensibly drunk after a dance and takes the key. Parthiban's associates reach the prison, set him free, put the same on Vikraman's face and dump him in prison. Parthiban assumes charge of the kingdom and introduces citizen friendly policies which are welcomed by the people.
Naganathan suspects foul play. By then, Vikraman sends a message to Naganathan by writing on his dinner plate about Parthiban impersonating him. Naganathan releases Vikraman, brings him to the assembly and stops the coronation of Parthiban as king. In the fight that ensues between Naganathan's army and Parthiban's people, Naganathan dies. Parthiban and Vikraman fight despite a plea from their mother. When Vikraman loses, he escapes in a chariot wearing his mask. Parthiban tries to stop him, but he rushes away. Vikraman dies when his chariot falls off a cliff. Parthiban rules Malarpuri as a virtuous son along with Amudha and his mother.

Cast

;Male cast
;Female cast
;Dance

Development

Uthama Puthiran is a remake of the same-titled 1940 Tamil film that featured P. U. Chinnappa in two distinct roles. It also adapts from The Man in the Iron Mask, the third part of the 1847–1850 novel by Alexandre Dumas. The film was directed by T. Prakash Rao, and its screenplay was written by C. V. Sridhar, who co-produced the film with his partners S. Krishnamoorthy and T. Govindarajan under the banner Venus Pictures. When Venus Pictures announced this film in a newspaper, the same day M. G. Ramachandran announced a film with the same title in the same paper. Ramachandran eventually scrapped his film, but persisted with his plans to make a dual role film and finally made Nadodi Mannan, and released it several months after Uthama Puthiran. Cinematography was handled by A. Vincent, and the editing by N. M. Shankar.

Casting

was chosen to portray the twin brothers Parthiban and Vikraman, making this the first film to feature him in dual roles. Padmini was cast as the female lead. M. K. Radha was cast as the king of Malarpuri, and P. Kannamba as the queen of the same kingdom. Bollywood dancer Helen was recruited to perform a dance sequence in the song "Yaaradi Nee Mohini".

Filming

The song "Kaathiruppan Kamalakannan", is picturised on Padmini and her sister Ragini's characters performing a Bharatham dance. Vincent recalled shooting a song sequence at Brindavan Gardens, Mysore:
Thus, Uthama Puthiran became the first Indian film to have the shots with zoom technique. The final length of the film measured.

Soundtrack

The soundtrack of the film was composed by G. Ramanathan. "Yaaradi Nee Mohini" is Tamil cinema's first "rock ‘n’ roll dance". The song "Mullai Malar Mele" is set in the Carnatic raga known as Darbari Kanada, while "Kaathiruppan Kamalakannan" is set in Saramati.

Release and reception

Uthama Puthiran was released on 7 February 1958, and was distributed by Ganesan's own company Sivaji Films in Madras. In a review dated 16 February 1958, the magazine Ananda Vikatan praised the acting by Ganesan, the grand making, songs and the fight scenes. The film became a major commercial success, running for over 100 days in theatres. Its Telugu-dubbed version, Veera Pratap, also performed well, having grossed over. It was also dubbed in Hindi as Sitamgar. The success of Uthama Puthiran established Ganesan as a bankable star in Tamil cinema.

Legacy

Uthama Puthiran was the inspiration behind Imsai Arasan 23rd Pulikecei, a 2006 comedy film starring Vadivelu as the twins.