Ramji Rao Speaking

Ramji Rao Speaking
Poster
Directed bySiddique–Lal
Written bySiddique–Lal
Produced byFazil
Ousepachan Vaalakuzhy
Swargachitra Appachan
StarringSai Kumar
Mukesh
Innocent
Vijayaraghavan
Devan
CinematographyVenu
Edited byT. R. Shekar
Music byS. Balakrishnan
Production
company
Adithya Films
Distributed byCentury
Release date
  • 4 August 1989 (1989-08-04)
Running time
150 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageMalayalam

Ramji Rao Speaking is a 1989 Indian Malayalam-language comedy-thriller film written and directed by the duo Siddique–Lal (in their directorial debut) and produced by Fazil, Swargachitra Appachan, and Ousepachan Vaalakuzhy. It stars Sai Kumar, Mukesh, Innocent, Vijayaraghavan, Devan, Rekha, with Sankaradi, Sukumari, Kunchan and Mamukkoya in other supporting roles. The film deals with social factors affecting Kerala including unemployment during the 1980s, and went on to achieve a cult classic status.[1][2][3]

Ramji Rao Speaking marked the debut of director duo Siddique and Lal, actors Sai Kumar (first appearance in a notable role), Rekha, N. F. Varghese and Harishree Ashokan (both in minor roles), and music director S. Balakrishnan. Mannar Mathai Speaking (1995) and Mannar Mathai Speaking 2 (2014) are the sequels to the film.

The core plot of the movie was inspired by the 1971 American Broadcasting Company TV film See The Man Run directed by Corey Allen and written by Mann Rubin.[4] Fazil remade this film in Tamil as Arangetra Velai (1990), with Mamukkoya, Sukumari and Vijayaraghavan reprising their role and the character of Gopalakrishnan being replaced by a female. Priyadarshan remade the film in Hindi, titled Hera Pheri (2000). It was also remade in Telugu as Dhanalakshmi, I Love You (2002), in Odia as Wrong Number (2002), in Kannada as Trin Trin (2004), in Bengali as Hera Pheri (2016) and Punjabi as Gol Gappe (2023).

  1. ^ ജ്യോതിഷ്, വി.ആര്‍. (21 October 2016). "ഫാസിൽ മനുഷ്യനെ പറ്റിക്കാൻ ഇറങ്ങിയിരിക്കുകയാണ്...റാംജിറാവുവിനൊപ്പം കഥകളും ഇറങ്ങി; സിദ്ദിഖ്–ലാൽ". Vanitha. Archived from the original on 25 October 2016. Retrieved 21 October 2016.
  2. ^ Vijay George (7 November 2013). "Three of a kind". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 26 June 2021. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
  3. ^ George, Vijay (29 July 2015). "Malayalam films remade in Hindi". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 26 June 2021. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
  4. ^ "Priyardarshan on 20 years of 'Hera Pheri': Humour can never die". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 3 January 2024. Retrieved 24 July 2021.

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