Anirudh Ravichander composed the film's soundtrack and score while Om Prakash and Prasanna G. K. undertook the film's cinematography and editing respectively. After being in pre-production phase since March 2014, principal photography began on 5 November 2014 and lasted till 15 March 2015. The film was shot in and around Chennai and Tuticorin. Maari was released on 17 July 2015. The film received mixed reviews upon its release, but had a decent collection at the box office.[1] A sequel titled Maari 2 was released on 21 December 2018.
Plot
Police Constable Arumugam talks to the new Sub-Inspector, Arjun, about Maari, a local rowdy who rose to fame after killing a rival rowdy, Pandi. He wants to get evidence that Maari killed Pandi so that he can put Maari behind bars. Maari is an irritating guy who, along with his henchmen Sanikilamai and Adithangi, constantly pesters the people in the area and extorts money from them. His main line of work is training racing pigeons. His boss is Velu, a don who is also involved in the pigeon races and sandalwoodsmuggling.
Maari constantly has fights with "Bird" Ravi, another local rowdy who is also working under Velu. One day, a lady named Sridevi enters the business, trying to open a boutique in Maari's area. Maari forcefully becomes her partner in the shop. He angers her after she loses a couple's order after Maari purposely increases their bill. She goes to the police station and decides to help Arjun catch Maari by getting close to him, pretending to fall in love with him, and incriminating him with evidence of his confession. He had tried to kill the rival rowdy but failed. She shoots the talk with Maari in a drunken state, who describes the murder, saying that somebody else had killed him, and Maari took the credit. Arjun soon arrests Maari. Seven months later, when he is released, he discovers that the police also arrested Velu for sandalwood smuggling. The people discover that Arjun is a corrupt cop, and he and Ravi are working together and have arrested some people in the area under the pretext of smuggling to extort money and sent them to prison.
Maari decides to take revenge on the duo. He first frees the local people from the extortion by Ravi's gang, while Sridevi apologises to him and also falls in love with him for real. Sanikilamai reveals to Sridevi that Maari loved and cared his pigeons since no one cared for him. Pandi killed one of his pigeons so that is why Maari stabbed Pandi. Later, Maari captures one of Arjun's smuggling vehicles and the driver, forcing Arjun to release Velu. Also, the people arrested for removing sandalwood get released, and the people respect Maari. When Arjun takes revenge by burning Maari's pigeon coop, which kills 10 of his pigeons, he gets angry. He goes to Arjun's sandalwood place and beats up Arjun, Ravi, and their henchmen. Ravi agrees to confess everything. Angered, Arjun stabs Ravi. Eventually, the Revenue Department arrives and arrests him after Aarumugam reveals his secrets. Finally, Sridevi approaches Maari to confess her love to him, which he rejects, returning to pester the local people and extort them for cash.
The collaboration between Listin Stephen and Radhika's production house and director Balaji Mohan was first revealed in early January 2014, with Dhanush and Kajal Aggarwal being signed on to be a part of the "romantic entertainer".[3] The first look poster released later indicated that Dhanush was a co-producer of the film.[4] Mohan wanted the film not to be a bilingual like his previous ventures as he found the process difficult to shoot the same shot twice and to retain the same energy in both of them. He said in an interview in March 2014 that he narrated a one-liner to Dhanush, on whose consent, he would develop the complete script after releasing Vaayai Moodi Pesavum (2014), adding that this film would "definitely not be a love story".[5] Dhanush had said in early August 2014 that the project was in its pre-production stages.[6]Anirudh Ravichander, who was supposed to work with Mohan for Vaayai Moodi Pesavum, was selected as the film's music director, marking his fifth collaboration with Wunderbar Films. Prasanna, an assistant of A. Sreekar Prasad, was signed in on as the film's editor while Om Prakash undertook the cinematography. R. K. Vijay Murugan was signed in on as the film's art director.[7] On 7 November 2014, Mohan announced that the film was titled Maari.
Dhanush was initially rumoured to be seen as a tailor living in north-Madras in the film. Sources close to the film's unit later said that he would be seen as a local slum chieftain for which he had to speak in a Madras accent.[8] His character was later revealed to be a person who is into pigeon racing, similar to the one he played in Aadukalam (2011), where he was seen as a person dealing with rooster fights.[9] Kajal Aggarwal, who was supposed to work with Dhanush in Polladhavan (2007),[10] was cast on Dhanush's insistence, who wanted to gain a foothold in Telugu cinema by cashing in on Aggarwal's stardom there.[11] She said in an interview that she overcame her fear of birds due to her experiences with pigeons during the film's shoot.[12] Although Kajal Aggarwal was signed during the film's initial stages of production, she joined the sets in November 2014.[13]Robo Shankar, one of the cast of Vaayai Moodi Pesavum, was signed in on for an important role.[7] Playback singer Vijay Yesudas joined the team in December 2014, making his debut as an actor in Tamil cinema.[14] He stated in late February 2015 that he would play the role of a police officer.[15] Anirudh made a cameo appearance in the film and joined its sets in mid March 2015.[16]
Filming
Principal photography began on 4 November 2014 at T. Nagar in Chennai.[7] The film's second schedule began on 25 November 2014.[17] By 11 December 20 days of the film's shoot was done including a montage song.[18] A special set was erected at Valasaravakkam, Chennai where portions of the film including a song and a fight sequence were shot for 20 days continuously from 23 December 2014.[19]
By 8 January 2015, half of the film shoot was completed, which included two songs. The team planned two short schedules, one before Pongal and one around 20 January 2015 for 5 days.[20] Filming continued at a market area in Triplicane during early February 2015 and a similar set was erected in Chennai to shoot major portions of the film.[8] The film's shoot was wrapped up by 21 February 2015 in four months.[21] It was later known that 20% of the filming is remaining for which the film's team left for Tuticorin port to shoot the film's last schedule.[22] The song "Thara Local Boys" featuring Dhanush and Anirudh was shot in mid March 2015.[citation needed] Dhanush confirmed the completion of principal photography on 15 March 2015 through his Twitter page.[23]
The soundtrack album was composed by Anirudh Ravichander, with lyrics written by Dhanush, Vignesh Shivan and G. Rokesh. The film marks the third collaboration between Dhanush and Anirudh Ravichander. The album was released on 7 June 2015 through the Sony Music record label.[24]
Release
The film was scheduled to release on 17 July 2015, coinciding with the Eid al-Fitr.[25] Despite the release of Baahubali: The Beginning, and had a biggest opening of 294 screens in Chennai city, and 600 screens in Tamil Nadu, on the first day of its release, after Velaiilla Pattadhari, the second Dhanush-starrer film to have a huge opening at the box office.[26]
Distribution
In addition the film was dubbed and released in Hindi as Rowdy Hero and in Telugu as Mass in 2016. The rights for the Telugu dubbed version were acquired by Vasireddi Padmakara Rao.[27]
Promotion
The first look poster of the film was released on 7 November 2014, revealed by Dhanush on Twitter. The new poster is loud and colorful and features Dhanush of course in rounded sunglasses, with a colourful scarf and a gold chain.[28] The second look poster was released on 1 January 2015, coinciding the New Year's Day, featuring Dhanush tweaking his moustache. The teaser of the film was released on 20 May 2015, which happens to be the introduction scene of Dhanush from a fight sequence, who walks in from behind a car with a cigarette in his hand. The stylish entry of Dhanush and with the background score composed by Anirudh adds the mass effect of the teaser. The cinematography is handled by Om Prakash and the teaser has raised the expectations of the film.[29][30] The theatrical trailer of Maari was released on 25 June 2015.[31][32]
Home Media
Star Vijay acquired the satellite rights of the film, initially reporting that the satellite rights were secured by Sun TV.[33] The film's television premiere took place on 10 November 2015, at 10:00 a.m. IST during Diwali.[34]
Reception
Critical reception
Maari received mixed reviews from critics, who praised the music, production values, humour, and performances of Dhanush and Robo Shankar, while criticizing the director for making a routine masala fare and deviating from the offbeat comical tone of his previous two directorial ventures.[citation needed]
Baradwaj Rangan wrote, "Save for the bits with Robo Shankar, the writing is shockingly ordinary — lots of tells, very little show...Does making a mass movie mean that you forget to make an interesting one?"[35]The Times of India gave 2 out of 5 and wrote, "If you, like many others, had been excited about Maari after watching its trailer, be prepared for disappointment. Almost all the worst bits from the film are already in the trailer and the film clearly lacks the crackling energy that we see in the trailer. Maari largely feels like one huge build-up without any proper pay-off".[36] NDTV wrote, "A couple of mass moments and some quirky humor apart, there's nothing in Maari to justify the much-anticipated Balaji Mohan- Dhanush collaboration".[37]Indo-Asian News Service wrote, "the director isn't capable of delivering a wholesome commercial entertainer with some story, some heroism and some cliches a la Dhanush's recent blockbuster Vella Illa Pattathari. Except for the story, we get everything else from Maari, and that's the smallest concern of the movie", with the critic adding that "Dhanush saves a very ordinary film".[38]Rediff gave 0.5 out of 5 and wrote, "Uninspiring and predictable, director Balaji Mohan's Maari is just another mass masala movie created to idolise its hero".[39]The New Indian Express wrote, "The director's attempt to go ‘commercial’ this time, concentrating more on his hero than the script, backfires. The film gives a sense of Deja vu throughout, the real interesting moments very few and far between", calling the film "a painless tedious experience, meant for hardcore Dhanush fans".[40]
Behindwoods gave 1.5 out of 5 and stated "Maari is a very dummy masala flick made to satisfy the mass audience".[41]Sify gave 1 out of 5 by saying Director Balaji Mohan has made the film with childish punch dialogues, slow-motion shots and an adrenaline flawless background score by Anirudh. It is a film that makes no bones, no pretenses about the fact that it is packaged for E audiences.[42]
Box office
Maari collected ₹9 - 10.3 crore on its opening weekend (domestic) which was the highest for Dhanush. The film was released in 294 screens in Chennai, where it collected ₹1.61 crore,[43] The film managed to cross ₹23 crore in three weeks of its release.[44]
Controversies
Former health minister and politician Anbumani Ramadoss, criticised Dhanush for portraying on-screen smoking in this film.[45] Replying to this Dhanush, in an interview, stated "It is a call taken by the director of the film. The script and my character of a local thug demanded such a sequence in the film. But in real life, I don’t smoke. And I request my fans to take that as inspiration and not to smoke, and give up smoking if they are smokers."[46]
The glasses used by Dhanush in Maari, is a single original piece. There is only one piece of the exact specification of roundness and measurement, and no duplicate and spare version of the glass exists. The crew carefully saved the glasses from Maari and used in its sequel.[49] The outfits worn by Dhanush in this film became popular after its release.[50]
^Suganth, M. (18 July 2015). "Maari Movie Review". Times of india. Open Publishing. Archived from the original on 23 July 2015. Retrieved 19 July 2015.