The boss that ruled the year IndiaGlitz [Wednesday, December 26, 2007]

*Looking back 2007*

When you look back at 2007 in terms of cinema, you can't miss Sivaji – the
boss of 2007. No film in the history of Tamil cinema has evoked such
expectations before and after release.

A report in Financial Express (25.12.07) reveals that, according to Google,
Sivaji - The Boss was the second most searched film among the top searches
in India for 2007, only after Spiderman. This clearly shows the unbelievable
expectations and excitement the film by the superstar has evoked.

This is probably the first time in the long history of Indian cinema that a
South Indian film attracted national and international attention. The film
with an unprecedented budget made into the headlines of almost all national
television channels.

The dream combination did work. The reputed production house AVM, the most
sought after director Shankar, *the musical wizard of India A.R. Rahman*,
and the undisputed king of box office, superstar Rajinikanth – when you have
these names in a single venture, it is ought to be a great sensational and
it turned out to be exactly the same.

The Swashbuckling release of the film happened on June 15. It opened in
2,900 theatres in 27 countries across the globe. 700 prints were released
against 450 prints of Rajani's earlier movie 'Chandramukhi'.

Many films were withdrawn from the fray after the unprecedented opening of
Sivaji - The Boss. The film even had a good run in north India. Mind you,
there was no dubbing and no sub titles. Finally it went on to become a
blockbuster.

What made Sivaji so special? The above mentioned combination was ably
supported by write Sujatha's sharp dialogues and amazing stunt choreography
of Peter Heinz. To add colour to the fare Shankar has roped in the likes of
Prabhudeva, Raju Sundaram, Lawrence, and Brinda to make the song sequences
as unique experience. Thota Tharani's sets for the songs were breathtaking.
Vivek provided sensible support by his comical sense. And you had sensual
Shriya to put the screen on fire.

The way Shankar presented Sivaji is undoubtedly one of the highpoints of
Sivaji. We are not mentioning about the 'fair' Rajini alone. The way he
looked in the entire movie was something special. Shankar has also portrayed
him as a modern day educated youth and worked out his style and dialogues
accordingly. The 'cool' way of talking and the ease with which he handled
modern gadgets added colour to the character.

As a result of all such ingredients, Sivaji triumphed like anything and
emerged as a front runner in all aspects. Rajini proved his mettle even
after 30 years of his entry into filmdom.

So, Rajini emerges winner of 2007 with his inimitable style.


-- 
regards,
Vithur

A.R.RAHMAN -  THE ABODE OF DIVINE MUSIC

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