Sengottai (transl. Red Fort) is a 1996 Indian Tamil-language political action film directed by C. V. Sasikumar and produced by R. B. Choudary. The film stars Arjun Sarja, Meena and Rambha. The film was released on 19 April 1996 and bombed at the box-office.[1][2]

Sengottai
VCD cover
Directed byC. V. Sasikumar
Written byC. V. Sasikumar
Produced byR. B. Choudary
Starring
CinematographyV. Manikandan
Edited byB. Ramesh
Music byVidyasagar
Production
company
Release date
  • 19 April 1996 (1996-04-19)
Running time
150 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Plot edit

Thirumoorthy is a corrupt politician, who aspires to become the Prime Minister of India (PM) and hires a terrorist to kill the current PM. However, Thirumoorthy's plans gets foiled by SP Sekhar, who kills the terrorists and catches the leader. Neelakandan is an orthodox Brahmin and Sekhar's father's best friend, who along with Sekhar's father decides to marry his son to Neelakandan's daughter Meena, but Sekhar is in love with Yamuna. One day, Sekhar is appointed to find Franka, an Indo-French girl who arrived in India to learn about the country's culture. A sniper misses to kill Sekhar at the time, but accidentally kills Yamuna.

Meena is imprisoned as she is considered to be killing Franka. Sekhar invites Thirumoorthy for Gandhi Jayanti to prison, where Meena attempts to kill him. The same killer who killed Yamuna tries to kill Meena, but Sekhar saves her. Sekhar enquires Meena, where she reveals the truth. Franka's handbag is robbed with her passport inside it. Meena and Franka complain at the police station. Thirumoorthy lusted after Franka, where he forcefully had sex and killed her. Thangamani, a police officer, promised Meena to arrest the culprit, where he first prevented his partner Thirumoorthy. Thangamani arrested Meena and the villagers humiliated her family, where Meena's family have self-immolated.

Learning this, Sekhar marries Meena in the prison and she is released on bail. Sekhar is unable to arrest Thirumoorthy because it would cause a black mark for his country. Thangamani refuses to provide information to Sekhar, who later beats Thangamani. Thangamani reveals all about Thirumoorthy. However, a hitman kills Thangamani and kidnaps Sekhar. Thirumoorthy threatens Sekhar to kill his father and Meena if he does not kill the PM himself. Sekhar is escorted by Thirumoorthy's henchmen in the plane, but manages to escape from the plane and finds the place where his father and Meena are kept, and saves them. To save the PM, Sekhar finds the sniper and kills him. Thirumoorthy decides to kill the PM, but Sekhar saves him and kills Thirumoorthy.

Cast edit

Cameo appearances

Soundtrack edit

The music was composed by Vidyasagar.[3]

Song Singer(s) Lyrics Duration
"Boomiyea Boomiyea" S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, S. Janaki Vairamuthu 5:19
"Paadu Paadu" K. S. Chithra, Anuradha Sriram Muthulingam 4:36
"Uchchi Muthal Patham" Hariharan, Mitali Banerjee Bhawmik Palani Bharathi 5:06
"Vennilave Velli Poove" Mano, K. S. Chithra Vaali 4:06
"Vinnum Mannum" Mano, Swarnalatha 4:35

Reception edit

Tharamani of Kalki praised Yogamagi's art direction and Manikandan's cinematography and the performances of Meena and her friend. He also added the screenplay in first half is yawn inducing however despite picking up pace in second half its let down by illogical sequences.[4] D. S. Ramanujam of The Hindu wrote, "Arjun never puts a wrong foot forward, at his agile best in the action scenes and dancing and romancing with his known flourish, the Taj Mahal and other picturesque places in Agra making the frames look enchanting through Manikantan's cinematography".[5]

References edit

  1. ^ "Senkottai ( 1996 )". Cinesouth. Archived from the original on 18 September 2011. Retrieved 9 April 2012.
  2. ^ Sitaraman, Sandya (17 January 1997). "Tamil Movie News--Pudhu Edition 2". Google Groups. Archived from the original on 9 February 2023. Retrieved 9 February 2023. Even though it had all the right ingredients of a good masala, "Shengotai" bombed
  3. ^ "Sengottai (1996)". Raaga.com. Archived from the original on 9 February 2023. Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  4. ^ தரமணி (26 May 1996). "செங்கோட்டை". Kalki (in Tamil). Archived from the original on 9 February 2023. Retrieved 9 February 2023 – via Internet Archive.
  5. ^ Ramanujam, D. S. (26 April 1996). "Cinema: Karuppu Roja/Chiraichalai/Sengottai/Raajali". The Hindu. p. 27. Archived from the original on 21 December 1996. Retrieved 7 July 2023.

External links edit