Dhanush Celebrates 10 Years of National Award-Winning Film 'Visaranai'

Actor-producer Dhanush marked the 10th anniversary of the Tamil film 'Visaranai', expressing pride in the project jointly produced by his and director Vetrimaran's companies. The film, based on the book 'Lock Up' by auto driver M Chandrakumar, is a harrowing account of police torture. It won three National Awards, including Best Picture and Best Supporting Actor for Samuthirakani. 'Visaranai' also gained international recognition, winning prizes at the Venice International Film Festival.

Key Points: Visaranai 10 Years: Dhanush Recalls Cult Classic Film

  • Film completes a decade
  • Won three National Awards
  • Based on auto driver's book
  • Won awards at Venice festival
  • Jointly produced by Dhanush and Vetrimaran
3 min read

Dhanush recalls working on 'Visaranai' as film completes 10 years; terms it as "a film that won hearts!"

As 'Visaranai' completes 10 years, Dhanush recalls producing the National Award-winning film with Vetrimaran. Read about its acclaim.

"Ten years of Visaranai - a film that won hearts - Dhanush"

Chennai, Feb 12

On the occasion of one of Tamil cinema's finest films 'Visaranai', completing 10 years, actor, producer and director Dhanush pointed out that the film was one that won hearts and that he was proud to call it a gem that was produced jointly by his production house and the production house of the film's director, Vetrimaran.

Taking to his X timeline to express his thoughts on the film, which not only won National Awards but international acclaim when it released, Dhanush wrote, "Ten years of Visaranai - a film that won hearts, Proud to call it a gem from Wunderbar Films and Grassroot film company."

The film, hailed as a cult classic, emerged a superhit when it first released. Jointly produced by actor Dhanush's Wunderbar Films and director Vetrimaran's Grassroots Film Company, the film featured actors Attakathi Dinesh, Samuthirakani, Aadukalam Murugadoss, Anandhi, Saravana Subbiah and Kishore among others.

'Visaranai' was based on a book called 'Lock Up', which was written by M Chandrakumar, an auto driver, who in his spare time, wrote about the torture he suffered at the hands of the police after being illegally detained for a crime he did not commit.

The film, which was critically acclaimed and celebrated by the audiences, bagged three National awards at the 63rd National Awards. It won the awards for Best Picture, for Best Supporting Actor (Samuthirakani) and for Best Editor(Kishore).

In fact, Dhanush, who had expressed delight at the honour, had then said, "Sometimes, even when we begin a project, we know that this film will reach a significant position. Visaranai is one such project. It has been both critically acclaimed and commercially successful. I am very happy for Samuthirakani and Editor Kishore. My happiness is three times more as the film has won three National Awards. "

He had gone on to thank director Vetrimaran saying, it had become his duty to thank Vetrimaran for given him three National Awards and that the fact that the Tamil audiences had accepted this film had given him both happiness and the drive to deliver more such films.

'Visaranai' won international acclaim, walking away with the Orizzonti Prize and the Amnesty International Italy Award at the 72nd Venice International Film Festival.

A report on the Amnesty International's Italian website had then quoted Riccardo Noury, spokesman for Amnesty International Italy, as having observed that, "Many other films in the festival have dealt with various aspects of human rights, with sensitivity and originality. But 'Visaaranai', taken from the experience of a survivor who is now an activist for human rights, has prevailed over the others, for the powerful manner of denunciation of the torture in the police stations of India."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Samuthirakani
A landmark film in Tamil cinema. It showed the ugly truth about police brutality that many face but few talk about. Winning the National Award for Best Supporting Actor was a proud moment, but the real win was the conversation it started. 10 years on, its relevance hasn't faded.
R
Rohit P
Can't believe it's been 10 years! This film was a wake-up call. The performances, especially by Dinesh, were raw and heartbreaking. More than entertainment, it was a social responsibility. Proud that an Indian film got such recognition in Venice.
A
Anjali F
While I appreciate the film's intent and acclaim, I sometimes feel such hard-hitting films only preach to the converted. Did it actually change any police procedures or bring justice to more "M Chandrakumars"? I wish there was a follow-up on the real-world impact.
K
Karthik V
Vetrimaran-Dhanush combo is pure gold! From Polladhavan to Asuran to this. They don't just make movies, they create landmarks. Wunderbar Films has really raised the bar for production houses in the South. Here's to more meaningful cinema! 🎬
M
Michael C
As someone who watched this at an international festival, the impact was universal. The Amnesty International award was well-deserved. It's impressive how regional Indian cinema often tackles tougher subjects than mainstream Bollywood. A masterclass in storytelling.

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