Naiyaandi
2013

Naiyaandi

Chinna (Dhanush) and Vanaroja (Nazriya Nazim) are in love with each other and plan to get married. But in an unexpected turn of events, her marriage is fixed with someone else. After managing to escape her impending marriage, Vanaroja comes to live with Chinna's family. However, things take a bizarre turn after both Chinna’s brothers fall for Vanaroja.

Locations in Europe: Switzerland
Storyline
  • Director/Producer: Director: A. Sarkunam, Producer: Selva Kathiresan
    Star(s): Dhanush, Nazriya Nazim, Vamsi Krishna
    Songs/Dance:
    Shot in Switzerland
    Indian/ International Crew: Indian and international
    Language: Tamil


    Film Location Analysis

    By Veena Hariharan

    The song "Munnadi Pora Pulla" was shot in various locations in Switzerland. 

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmkQORs0eNw

    The film is picturised as a dream sequence that opens with Chinna’s free fall through an urban landscape of Switzerland captured in an aerial view. The comedic song mobilises various elements to produce humour. First, the actors dressed in exaggerated traditional and garish costumes, break out into raunchy local dances, standing in sharp contrast to the modern, sanitised, and controlled Swiss city spaces. A swathe of mostly white chorus dancers in the background roll up their dresses to imitate the South Indian mundus and lungis, and dance with equal raunchiness, adding more humour to the sequence. As the onlookers watch the song in progress, we are not sure if they are part of the song, or part of the original shooting location. Their bewilderment at what is going on adds to the comedic aspect of the song. In the next sequence, the background dancers disappear, and the actors are shot in medium close-ups as they dance onboard a steamer, the grey skies and sea in the background. These are shot from angles that mimic the rocky movements of the steamer, with low angles exaggerating their gyrating dance movements. Their expressions mimic and exaggerate the staple love songs of Tamil films, providing a touch of ironic humour. Finally, as the background chorus dancers reappear, the location shifts, and they are framed against the Fork Sculpture at Vevey and the Broken Chair (Geneva). The exaggerated scale and proportion of these monuments provide an added dimension of humour to the sequence.

    Additional Information & Links

    Promo: https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x14r90d

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