Cocktail (2010 film)
Cocktail | |
---|---|
Official poster | |
Directed by | Arun Kumar Aravind |
Produced by | Milan Jaleel |
Screenplay by |
Shyam Menon Anoop Menon (dialogue) |
Story by | William Morrissey |
Starring |
Jayasurya Anoop Menon Samvrutha Sunil Fahadh Faasil Innocent Mamukkoya |
Music by |
Ratheesh Vegha Alphons Joseph |
Cinematography | Pradeep Nair |
Edited by | Arun Kumar |
Production company |
Galaxy Films |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 111 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Malayalam |
Cocktail is a 2010 Malayalam thriller film edited and directed by Arun Kumar Aravind. The film stars Jayasurya, Anoop Menon, Samvrutha Sunil, Fahadh Faasil, Innocent, and Mamukkoya. It is co-written by Anoop Menon and is a credited remake of the Canadian film Butterfly on a Wheel.[1][2] It was the directorial debut of film editor Arun Kumar.
Plot
Ravi Abraham (Anoop Menon) is one of the key brains behind the success of a construction firm. He has rivals within and outside the office, jealous of his success. At home, he has a blissful life with his wife Parvathy (Samvrutha Sunil) and daughter Ammu. But things go terribly wrong for Ravi and Parvathy one fine morning, with a stranger (Jayasurya), who asks for a lift in their car. For the first few minutes, The stranger appears to be a naive mild guy but his tone changes soon and he begins to blackmail the couple, telling them that their daughter is kidnapped and with just one phone call from him the brand-new babysitter will kill her. They are forced to obey several bizarre instructions one after the other. First the stranger asks them to withdraw the entire balance from their bank account in cash. Soon after the stranger sets fire to the currency notes in a suitcase and throws the whole thing into a river along with their wallets. The stranger then proceeds to ask for more money, so Ravi sells his wrist watch worth one hundred thousand rupees, for a sum of just Rs 6000. As the day progresses both Ravi and Parvathy are made to drive around and perform several tasks, including leaking Ravi's firm's top secret business plans to their rival group, forcing Ravi to bargain with a sex worker, etc. The stranger also traps them in a sleazy lodge where he begins to remove Parvathy's garments but stops short of proceeding further. At last, towards the late hours of the night, they reach Ravi's boss's house. Ravi is asked to shoot his boss if he wants to have his daughter returned alive. Ravi enters the house and to his surprise finds his colleague Devi there.
Part of the drama unveils to the audience now: it is Devi's house, the stranger is her husband Venky/Venkitesh, and Ravi and Devi have been having an extramarital affair. In the subsequent few minutes, we realise that all this was a drama plotted and enacted by Venky and Parvathy, both deeply hurt by their partners' deceit, in order to teach their spouses about the pain they themselves went through.
The last shot of the movie has Ravi and Parvathy a year later at a hospital for the infirm. They see a paralyzed Devi, a victim of a suicide attempt, being cared for by an affectionate Venky.
Cast
- Jayasurya as Venky
- Anoop Menon as Ravi Abraham
- Samvrutha Sunil as Parvathy
- Innocent as KalyanKrishnan
- Mamukoya as Hakkim Seth
- Fahadh Faasil as Navin Krishnamurthy(Ravi's Boss)
- Aparna Nair as Devi
- Kani Kusruti as Elsa (The prostitute)
- Lena Abhilash as doctor
- Joju George as Anand, Ravi's colleague
- Baby Ester as Ravi's daughter
Box office
Even though Cocktail could not manage a bumper initial, the movie picked up after a couple of days of the release. Cocktail has the dubious distinction of raising a controversy about the box-office performance. In a box-office analysis, Sify said that the film did not do well in the box office.[3] However, an article in Expressbuzz.com, published some days after its release, said that the film is a "sleeper hit" and had a "dream run at the box office".[4]
Soundtrack
The soundtrack of the film, composed by Alphons Joseph and Ratheesh Vegha. The album features 7 songs which has been written by Anil Panachooran and Santhosh Varma.[5] [6]
No. | Title | Lyrics | Music | Singer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Neeyaam Thanalinu" | Anil Panachooran | Ratheesh Vegha | Vijay Yesudas, Thulasi Yatheendran | |
2. | "Vennilavinumivide" | Santhosh Varma | Alphons Joseph | Alphons Joseph | |
3. | "Parayatharo" | Santhosh Varma | Alphons Joseph | Sayanora | |
4. | "Neeyam Thanalinu" | Anil Panachooran | Ratheesh Vegha | Rahul Nambiar | |
5. | "Theme Music 1" (Instrumental) | Ratheesh Vegha | |||
6. | "Theme Music 2" (Instrumental) | Ratheesh Vegha | |||
7. | "Theme Music 3" (Instrumental) | Ratheesh Vegha |
References
- ↑ Rediff Review
- ↑ Sify Review
- ↑ http://www.sify.com/movies/top-10-malayalam-actors-of-2010-imagegallery-malayalam-km4lKwadegb.html#galname
- ↑ Parvathy S Nair (18 November 2010). "Cocktail, a dream run at the box office". Expressbuzz.com. Retrieved 7 January 2011.
- ↑ http://musikmelody.net/index.php/category/malayalam-music/page/2/
- ↑ http://malayalasangeetham.info/php/MovieDetails.php?mid=6750&encode=utf
External links
- Cocktail at the Internet Movie Database