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M. Maamannan (soundtrack) Maanaadu (soundtrack) Maari (soundtrack) Madras (soundtrack) Mankatha (soundtrack) Maryan (soundtrack) Massu Engira Masilamani (soundtrack)
The films are made primarily in the Tamil language. Chintamani (1937) and Haridas (1944) are landmark films from the early stages of Tamil cinema. Chintamani was the first major box office success, while Haridas is noted for its significant impact and long theatrical run, reflecting industry's development before its formal establishment post ...
[3] [4] He is one of the most prolific singers among Tamil actors. [5] Vijay made his debut by singing "Bombay City Sukkha Rotti" (1994) in Rasigan. After his 25th song "Vaadi Vaadi" (2005) in Sachein, Vijay took a sabbatical from singing to concentrate on acting, [3] but made a comeback with "Google Google" in Thuppakki (2012).
For the song "Pombale Oruthi Irundaalaam", singers A. L. Raghavan and T. M. Soundararajan came up with lines in their first language Saurashtra. The words "Sodija" and "Daakara" in the song are presented as gibberish that Nagesh 's character uses to frighten Kanchana's, but they actually mean "Leave me and go" and "I am afraid" in Saurashtra.
Marmayogi (transl. The Mysterious Sage) is a 1951 Indian Tamil-language swashbuckler film directed by K. Ramnoth and produced by M. Somasundaram. An adaptation of the novel Vengeance by Marie Corelli and William Shakespeare's play Macbeth, the film was shot simultaneously in Hindi as Ek Tha Raja (transl.
Koondhalile Megam Vanthu (Tamil) / Kurulande Megham Varishi (Telugu) Bala Nagamma (1981 film) Ilaiyaraaja: K. J. Yesudas: Bilahari: Nee Ondruthaana Sangeetham (Tamil) / Neethone (Telugu) Unnal Mudiyum Thambi, Rudraveena (film) Ilaiyaraaja: K. J. Yesudas: Bilahari: Kanna Nee Thoongada Bahubali 2: The Conclusion: M. M. Keeravani: Nayana Nair ...
Title Director Production Music Cast Release date (D-M-Y) Chandrika: V. S. Raghavan: Sri Krishna Productions V. Dakshinamoorthy G. Govindarajulu Naidu: Thikkurissy ...
Krishna Bhakthi (transl. Devotion to Krishna) is a 1949 Tamil-language historical musical film, directed by R. S. Mani, and produced by S. N. Laxmana Chettiar.The film stars P. U. Chinnappa and T. R. Rajakumari as a hypocrite saint and chaste court dancer respectively.