House Full | |
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![]() Title card | |
Directed by | R. Parthiban |
Written by | R. Parthiban |
Produced by |
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Starring | R. Parthiban Vikram Roja Suvalakshmi |
Cinematography | M. V. Panneerselvam |
Edited by | M. N. Raja |
Music by | Ilaiyaraaja |
Production company | |
Release date |
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Running time | 138 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Tamil |
House Full[a] is a 1999 IndianTamil-languagethriller film written and directed byR. Parthiban. The film stars himself along withVikram,Roja andSuvalakshmi. The film was produced by Parthiban's children underBioscope Film Framers. The film's score and soundtrack are composed byIlaiyaraaja. The film was released on 15 January 1999.[3] It won theNational Film Award for Best Tamil Feature Film, and twoTamil Nadu State Film Awards:Best Director (Parthiban) andBest Editor (M. N. Raja).
Ayya is a respected man who runs a cinema theatre. The story begins when bombs are placed inside the theatre during a movie. The police commissioner and DGP want to defuse the bombs without letting the audience know. Hameed is one of the people in the theatre, and Indhu is the woman outside who loves him.
Ayya's ex-wife does not help when she makes a tear-filled request to him to evacuate the theatre, against the police's advice. By the time Ayya makes a decision, however, Indhu has already snuck in and warned Hameed. Others, hearing her words, begin to run out of the theatre. Panic ensues as everyone makes a mad dash for the door.
Ayya helps the audience exit the theatre without caring for his own life. Finally when everyone is evacuated, Ayya also comes out of the theatre. Suddenly, the sound of a baby crying is heard inside the theatre. Ayya rushes into the theatre with the hope of saving the baby, but the sound is just a scene in the movie that was actually getting played. Unfortunately, the bomb explodes and Ayya dies.
Parthiban revealed in a 2019 interview withBaradwaj Rangan that he made this film without a written script. Everything from dialogues, shots, etc., was done on the day of the shooting at shooting site.[4][5] The film was predominantly shot at Sridevi theatre at Madurai.[6] Parthiban planned to shoot there only for two weeks; however he bought the theatre for lease and completed filming within seven weeks. The film's ending was shot on a theatre set at Prasad Studios where a miniature was also created.[7]
K. N. Vijiyan ofNew Straits Times opined that "Catch this film if you are looking for a story with a difference".[8] A critic fromDeccan Herald wrote "Housefull is awfully silly, and seems to serve no other purpose than to show Parthiban, as being capable of political authority".[1]Kalki praised Parthiban for attempting aSpeed kind of thriller in Tamil.[9] D. S. Ramanujam ofThe Hindu appreciated the film's theme and Parthiban's getup for seeming "new" to Tamil cinema, "But the amount of tension such a yarn is supposed to generate is sadly missing in his screenplay and narration based on his story, making it a damp squib". Nonetheless, he appreciated Panneerselvam's cinematography, M. N. Raja's editing and R. K. Nagu's art direction.[2]
House Full won theNational Film Award for Best Tamil Feature Film at the46th National Film Awards.[10] It also won twoTamil Nadu State Film Awards:Best Director (Parthiban) andBest Editor (M. N. Raja).[11]