| Cast: | Sivaji Ganesan, Arjun, Soundarya, Maheswari, Visu, K.R.Vijaya, R.Sunderrajan |
| Music: | Geethapriyan |
| Direction: | P.N Ramachandar |
A standard and predictable masala flick.Sivaji plays yet another do-gooder whose son, Arjun, is uneducated. Arjun falls in love with Soundarya and Sivaji, who wants an educated girl as his daughter-in-law, approves of her too. He kicks out the father-son duo of the chairman and the managing director of his company and puts Arjun and Soundarya in those places.
While the two villains lick their wounds waiting for a chance to strike back, problems arise between Arjun and Soundarya owing to the differences in their educational status. The villains introduce Maheswari to further drive a wedge between the couple and she plays her part well enough to separate the two.
Hearing this news, Sivaji returns from Ooty but the villains arrange for an accident to his car. Sivaji survives and tells the truth to his family doctor but keeps it a secret from everyone else. He stays in the background, pulling the right strings to get his son and daughter-in-law back together and save his company.
When Arjun acknowledges Maheswari, now his secretary, as the woman behind his success, Soundarya gets really upset and seeing them together in her house, further fuels her suspicions. So she in turn insults him when he goes to visit her. How they get back together makes up for the rest of the movie.
The first half moves along nicely with the director fashioning nice sequences to bring up the split between Arjun and Soundarya. But the second half lacks punch with Sivaji resorting to age-old ghost tricks to scare the villains. The role is no challenge for Sivaji. Arjun and a pretty Soundarya are adequate.