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Keratam

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Keratam
Film poster
Directed byGautham Patnaik
R. N. Saran
Produced byS. V. Babu
StarringSiddharth Rajkumar
Aishwarya Devan
Rakul Preet Singh
CinematographyA. Venkatesh
Edited bySuresh Urs
Music byJoshua Sridhar
Production
company
SV Productions
Release date
  • 26 August 2011 (2011-08-26)
CountryIndia
LanguagesTelugu
Tamil

Keratam (transl. Wave) is a 2011 Indian Telugu-language coming-of-age drama film directed by Gautham Patnaik and produced by S. V. Babu. The film was simultaneously made in Tamil as Yuvan by director R. N. Saran. The film stars Siddharth Rajkumar, Aishwarya Devan and Rakul Preet Singh in the lead roles.[1] A remake of the Kannada film Josh (2009), the films featured music composed by Joshua Sridhar and were released in August 2011. The bilingual version had Aishwarya Devan and Rakul Preet Singh making her Telugu and Tamil language debuts respectively.

Plot

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Siddhartha "Siddhu" / Bala is the son of an honest government employee, who has seven friends and lives a happy life. Siddhu / Bala and his friends complete their HSE and join the college. As they grew up, Siddhu develops feelings towards Geetha / Meena. Siddhu / Bala clashes with a senior student called "Robo" due to Robo teasing and harassing Geetha / Meena. During a fight with Robo, Geetha / Meena and Siddhu / Bala's parents learn about their feelings.

The friends warn Siddhu / Bala to forget his love and concentrate on career, but Siddhu / Bala ignores it. They desert him and Geetha / Meena also listens to her parents and decides to concentrate on studies and becomes a doctor. At this juncture, Siddhu's father retires and agrees to shed the money as bribe to get a government job to Siddhu / Bala. However, Siddhu / Bala fails to turn up to the interview and loses the job. Siddhu / Bala harshly behaves with his father, which leads Siddu / Bala to be thrown out of the house.

Siddhu / Bala falls in love with Sangeetha / Meera and proposes to her, but Sangeetha / Meera rejects him, and Siddhu / Bala realizes his mistake for abandoning his career as his love is infatuation. Siddhu / Bala learns that his friends have become best achievers and are invited to their college function. Siddhu / Bala arrives at the stage and tells the speech about not to become like him and also promises his parents that he will take care of them. The friends reconcile with Siddhu / Bala and encourage him to achieve something in life.

Cast

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Cast (Telugu) Cast (Tamil) Role (Telugu) Role (Tamil)
Siddharth Rajkumar Siddharth "Siddhu" Bala
Aishwarya Devan Geetha Meena
Rakul Preet Singh Sangeetha Meera
Yamuna Sharadhamma[a]
Bhimaneni Srinivasa Rao Siddhu's father Bala's father
Srinath Geetha's father Meena's father
Kavitha Lakshmi[b]
Suman Ravishankar
Venu Madhav Lollu Sabha Jeeva PT Teacher
Pandu Bikshapati Avudaiyappan
Livingston Mohan Rao Jeevanantham
All Ok Alok Bunty
Sihi Kahi Chandru College Principal
Robot Ganesh Robo
Papa Pandu Chidanand College Lecturer
R. G. Vijayasarathy Alok's father Bunty's father

Production

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A remake of the Kannada film Josh (2009), the bilingual Telugu and Tamil project was launched by Kannada producer S. V. Babu. It marked the acting debut of Siddharth Rajkumar, a nephew of actor Krishnam Raju and a cousin of Prabhas.[2] The film also marked the debut of actresses Rakul Preet Singh and Aishwarya Devan in the Tamil and Telugu film industries, and it became the first project the actresses had signed in either language.[3][4] According to Siddharth Rajkumar, a Malayalam version was also planned.[2]

The Telugu version of the film was directed by Gautham Patnaik, the brother of renowned music composer R. P. Patnaik. The director of the original Kannada film, Shivamani, was approached to make the Tamil version but his refusal meant that newcomer R. N. Saran worked on the project.[5] Both versions of the film had been shot in Hyderabad, Bangalore, Chennai and Goa.[6] A song for both versions of the film (titled "Nidure Chedire" in Telugu and "Kan Paartha Neram" in Tamil) was shot in a secluded area of Goa, where the team of Ek Duuje Ke Liye (1981) had earlier shot.[citation needed] Production for the film was completed by June 2011.[7]

Soundtrack

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Songs composed by Joshua Sridhar. The song "Thanthane Thananthane" from the original was reused as "Nee Navvula" / "Kan Paartha Neram".

Keratam[8]
Yuvan[9]

Lyrics by Viveka and Kabilan.

  • "Thear Ival Eval Kattumum" - Benny Dayal
  • "Vanmegam Enn Vazhili" - Karthik, Shweta Menon
  • "Nilave Naanum" - Naresh Iyer, Padmapriya
  • "Kan Paartha Neram" - Karthik
  • "Fashion Show" - Vijay Narayan, Rita
  • "Nizhalum Tholaivil" - Karthik
  • "Sollu Petchu Ketka" - Vijay Prakash, Rita, Vijay Narayan

Reception

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Regarding the Telugu version, a reviewer from The Hindu noting that "The film has been handled well but is very formulaic."[10] Regarding the Tamil version, a critic from Dinamalar praised the film's intent while calling the film's comedy scenes a minus point.[11]

Notes

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  1. ^ Full name only mentioned in Tamil version.
  2. ^ Full name only mentioned in Telugu version.

References

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  1. ^ Raghavan, Nikhil (6 August 2011). "Itsy Bitsy". The Hindu.
  2. ^ a b "Big debut for Prabhas's cousin". The Times of India.
  3. ^ "Meet Rakul Preet Singh". Sify. Archived from the original on 9 October 2019.
  4. ^ "Miss India finalist Rakul debuts in Tollywood". Bollywood Life. 3 June 2011.
  5. ^ "Shivamani to reprise Bell Bottom role in Tamil". Bangalore Mirror.
  6. ^ Narasimham, M. L. (28 May 2011). "Entertainer with a message". The Hindu.
  7. ^ "Keratam, Siddharth Rajkumar's next". Sify. Archived from the original on 10 October 2019.
  8. ^ "Keratam Songs Download, Keratam Tamil MP3 Songs, Raaga.com Tamil Songs". www.raaga.com.
  9. ^ "MusicIndiaOnline - Indian Music for Free!". Archived from the original on 1 January 2015.
  10. ^ Chowdhary, Y. Sunita (27 August 2011). "A teenager's angst". The Hindu.
  11. ^ "யுவன் - விமர்சனம்". Dinamalar (in Tamil).
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