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The Kodaikanal caves which the film was shot in, including the song "Kanmani Anbodu Kadhalan", were then called Devil's Kitchen. [ 10 ] [ 21 ] Sathy who worked as production controller for the film revealed that "the cave was about 500 to 600 deep [..] we tied ropes with pulleys and transferred all the production equipments in and out of the ...
Guna Caves, initially named as Devil's Kitchen, is a cave located in Kodaikanal, Tamil Nadu, India. [2] It attracts many visitors every year. [3] The location got the name Guna Caves after it was featured in the 1991 film Gunaa starring Kamal Haasan. Since the release of the film, the location has attracted a large number of visitors and ...
Based on a Guna Caves rescue in 2006, [5] [4] in the film, a group of friends from a small locality called Manjummel near Kochi, who decide to have a vacation in Kodaikanal, which is affected when one of them becomes trapped in the Guna Caves. The film was officially announced in January 2023.
The climax scenes were shot in Guna Caves (Devil's Kitchen), [7] [8] and the hills in Kodaikanal. Filming completed in August 2010. [9] The stunt scenes were choreographed by Thyagarajan. [10] Mohanlal and Ananya performed their own stunts in the climax scenes in the caves. [11] Manu Jagadh handled the art direction of the film.
[b] [2] [4] 9 club members went to Kodaikanal to visit Guna Caves. [4] [1] A sign in Tamil indicated that the area was a prohibited area where 13 people had died; however, the group could not read Tamil and proceeded to cross the dilapidated fence. [4] Subhash, who had wanted to go into the 100-foot deep cave, tripped and fell inside. [2]
Kodaikanal (Tamil: [ko'ɖaɪ'kaːnəl]) (English: ko-DYE-KAH-null) is a municipality and hill station in Dindigul district in the state of Tamil Nadu, India.It is situated at an altitude of 2,225 m (7,300 ft) in the Palani hills of the Western Ghats.
The relationship between Gunaa and Rohini as shown in the song was considered to be love in the 1990s, but in modern times, it may also be considered as Stockholm syndrome. [3] According to Vishnu Sivasankar, the song can also be about the love and non-sexual affection in friendship such as bromance as shown by the song's placement throughout ...
The post said that the film, based on a real-life survival story involving a group of young Malayali friends visiting the Guna Caves in Kodaikanal, where one of them slips and falls into a deep hole, was "nothing but a celebration of ‘porikkis’ (loafers), justifying their drunken deeds and normalising drug abuse", like much of Malayalam ...