This thread is about IR's new albums.
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This thread is about IR's new albums.
http://www.ajithfans.com
Read the news from the above site that Naan Kadavul by Bala is starting in June and IR is the MD. Is this confirmed?
Yes normal man, unless God Father, which is stoped now, get life again and ask Bala to postpone the movie.
Is this the first movie IR is scoring for Ajith?
NO Thodarum is the first movie ...then u had another movie starring Vijay ,AJith ( forgot the name ..has 2 good songs oru sudar ,ival yaaro)
that movie is rajaavin paarvaiyilae
To me, AOK sounded to be a very good effort of IR. The last 30/40 seconds of "andhanaaL gnabagam" was simply brilliant. It was nothing but pure symphony. IR fans who missed the end because the song sounded another run of the mill IR number, please listen to it again.
"kaattu vazhi" tune was typically IRish, but the instruments were FRESH, and I'm completely hooked onto it. The other songs seemed like situation songs. When I first heard Virumandi songs, it sounded ordinary, but it had such a wonderful effect when seen with the movie. Let me hope, its the same case here.
http://www.dailythanthi.com/article....23/2005&advt=2
another film with IR...
Thanks app_engine. I'm kind of not expecting much from a TB comedy film.
I'm yet to get out of the hook from Kaatu Vazhi Kaal Nadia from AOKK.
Thalaivars movie Nayakan in top 100 Movies list of
Times:
http://us.rediff.com/movies/2005/may/23time.htm
Time magazine's just-announced list of the 100 best
films in motion picture history can be called a safe
bet, but throws up a few interesting and quirky
suprises.
The list, compiled by Time's movie critics Richard
Corliss and Richard Schickel, contains the usual
American classics -- The Godfather, ET, It's A
Wonderful Life, Pulp Fiction -- but also includes some
eclectic and curious choices, making for quite a
well-compiled selection.
Any list of directors would be complete minus the
immortals, and here too is present the inevitable
lineup of gods -- Federico Fellini (8 1/2), Akira
Kurosawa (Yojimbo), Francois Truffaut (The 400 Blows),
Satyajit Ray (his Apu trilogy -- Pather Panchali, Apur
Sansar and Aparajito), Stanley Kubrick (Dr Strangelove
Or How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb)
and Alfred Hitchcock (Psycho).
Besides Ray's three celluloid masterpieces, the list
touches on a couple of other Indian films, treating
the varied genres with decided reverence -- Guru
Dutt's 1957 masterpiece, Pyaasa; and Mani Ratnam's
brilliantly crafted Godfather-istic 1987 film,
Nayakan.
The two critics spring a few surprises. Comedy genius
Woody Allen makes the cut, obviously, but not in the
expected manner. Instead of his most-acclaimed Annie
Hall, the Time scribes picked his delightful 1985
film, The Purple Rose Of Cairo.
Similarly, the list admits such shocking choices like
David Cronenberg's 1986 hit, The Fly. Picked by
Corliss, this selection evidently disgusted Schickel,
and Corliss' defence of the graphic Jeff Goldblum film
is very amusing indeed.
IR is the MD for Thangar Bachchaan's next movie ...
NagaS