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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Overview  



1.1  Enthiran (2010 film)  





1.2  2.0 (2018 film)  





1.3  3.0 (2026 film)  







2 Films  



2.1  Enthiran  





2.2  2.0  







3 Recurring cast and characters  





4 Additional crew and production details  





5 Release and reception  



5.1  Box office  





5.2  Critical reception  







6 Notes  





7 References  





8 External links  














Enthiran (film series)







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Enthiran
Franchise logo
Created byS. Shankar
Original workEnthiran
Owner
  • Lyca Productions
  • Films and television
    Film(s)
  • 2.0 (2018)
  • 3.0 (2026)
  • Audio
    Soundtrack(s)
  • 2.0
  • 3.0
  • Official website
    Production Website

    Enthiran (transl.Robot) is an Indian Tamil-language science fiction film series directed, produced and written by S. Shankar. The music for the films was composed by A. R. Rahman. It consists of a two-part film series. The first film was Enthiran which released on 1 October 2010 and the second film was 2.0 , which released on 30 November 2018. Enthiran film seriesisthe third highest-grossing Indian film franchise after K.G.F and Baahubali. Rajinikanth appeared in the role of Dr. Vaseegaran and Chitti in both films.

    Overview

    [edit]

    Enthiran (2010 film)

    [edit]

    After a decade of research, the scientist K. Vaseegaran creates a sophisticated humanoid robot with the help of his assistants, Siva and Ravi, to commission it into the Indian Army. He introduces the robot, named Chitti, at a robotics conference in Chennai. Chitti helps Sana, Vaseegaran's medical student girlfriend, cheat in her examination, then saves her from being assaulted by a group of thugs in a local train. Vaseegaran's mentor, Professor Bohra, is secretly engaged in a project to create similar android robots for a German terrorist organisation, but his efforts were in vain. The organization gives Bohra an advanced payment. Bohra receives a warning from the terrorist organization, specifying a one-month timeframe during which he must complete the robots. Failure to do so will get him killed.

    Vaseegaran prepares Chitti for an evaluation by the Artificial Intelligence Research and Development (AIRD) Institute, which is headed by Bohra. During the evaluation, Chitti attempts to stab Vaseegaran at Bohra's command, which convinces the evaluation committee that the robot is a liability and cannot be used for military purposes. Vaseegaran's effort to prove Bohra wrong fails when he deploys Chitti to rescue people from a burning building. The robot saves most of them, including a girl named Selvi who was bathing at the time, but she is ashamed at being seen naked on camera. Though Vaseegaran puts his coat around her, and the girl's mother tries to convince her to come back, the girl flees, only to be hit and killed by a truck. Vaseegaran asks for one month to modify Chitti's neural schema to enable it to understand human behaviour and emotions, to which Bohra agrees. While nearing the deadline, Chitti becomes angry with Vaseegaran, demonstrating to him that it can manifest emotions.

    Chitti uses Sana's textbooks to successfully help Sana's sister Latha give birth to a child. Bohra congratulates Vaseegaran on the achievement and allows Chitti to pass the AIRD evaluation. Bohra then tells Vaseegaran that problems start from now on. Chitti develops romantic feelings for Sana after she congratulates Chitti by kissing it. When Vaseegaran and Sana realise this, Sana explains to Chitti that they are only friends. Saddened by Sana's rejection, yet still in love with her, Chitti purposely fails the evaluation conducted by the Indian Army the following day. Frustrated with Chitti's performance in the evaluation, Vaseegaran chops Chitti into pieces, which are dumped by Siva and Ravi into a landfill site.

    Bohra visits the site to retrieve Chitti, which has now reassembled itself, albeit in a damaged state. Chitti asks Bohra to take him to Bohra's house, not knowing that the person who had been searching for him was Bohra himself. After this, Bohra embeds a red chip inside Chitti while reconstructing it with Siva and Ravi, converting it into version 2.0, which is more aggressive and ruthless. When Siva and Ravi ask Bohra why he is doing this to Chitti, Bohra tells them that he is doing this to earn money through his business and defame Vaseegaran, scaring Siva and Ravi. It then gatecrashes Vaseegaran and Sana's wedding, kidnaps Sana and fights off numerous policemen on the way who chase it. It then creates replicas of itself using Bohra's robots, and then kills Bohra after he attempts to kill Sana. Using its robot army, Chitti occupies AIRD and causes mayhem in the city. After informing Sana that it has acquired the human ability to reproduce, Chitti wishes to marry her so that a machine and a human being can give birth to a pre-programmed child, but Sana refuses. It eventually finds Vaseegaran, who entered AIRD to stop the chaos, and nearly kills him just before the police appear. The ensuing battle between Chitti's robot army and the police personnel leads to a lot of property destruction and many casualties. While fighting the police personnel and the army, Chitti and his robots attack in various formations like a sphere, a snake, a wall and a large human-like figure. Vaseegaran eventually captures Chitti using a magnetic wall and accesses its internal control panel, whereby he instructs all the other robots to self-destruct. He then removes Chitti's red chip, calming it down.

    In a court hearing, Vaseegaran is sentenced to death for the casualties and damages caused by the robot army, but Chitti explains that it was Bohra who caused its deviant behaviour and shows the court video footage of Bohra installing the red chip. The court releases Vaseegaran, while ordering that Chitti be dismantled. Left with no choice, Vaseegaran asks Chitti to dismantle itself. While saying goodbye, Chitti apologises to Vaseegaran, Sana and their families who forgive it, before dismantling itself.

    The film's setting then shifts to 2030. Chitti is now a museum exhibit. A curious school student on an excursion trip asks her guide why it was dismantled, to which Chitti responds, "Naan sinthikka arambichen" (I started thinking).[1]

    2.0 (2018 film)

    [edit]

    Dr. Vaseegaran has recently built a new android humanoid assistant named Nila, whom he introduces to a group of college students. Shortly after, all the mobile phones in the city begin to fly into the sky, throwing the public into a panic. A scientific council assembles to discuss the phenomenon, in which Vaseegaran suggests reactivating the robot Chitti. But the plan is opposed by a member of the council, Dhinendra Bohra, whose father was killed by Chitti a few years back.

    The cell phones gather into a swarm and kill phone retail store owner Jayanth Kumar, telecom company owner Manoj Lula, and Telecom Minister Vaira Moorthy. The Home Minister S. Vijay Kumar gives permission for Vaseegaran to reactivate Chitti, whom he has already started working on. The cell phone swarm destroys phone towers around the city and wreaks havoc on the public, manifesting as a giant bird. A newly activated and upgraded Chitti battles the bird in the city and destroys it with an explosion. The remaining phones retreat and reform. Chitti, who runs out of battery takes refuge in three antennas at a space station. The bird tries to follow but is repelled by the antennas.

    Chitti informs Vaseegaran about this incident and confirms that the phones are powered by an aura, specifically a concentrated mass of negative charge with electromagnetic properties. Since the space station was streaming positive charged ions into space, the bird was repelled. Vaseegaran builds a photon synthesizer that projects positive charge, intending to neutralise the charge of the bird. The group confronts the bird and drains it of power. The phones take up a humanoid form, as the deceased ornithologist Pakshi Rajan.

    Chitti converses with Pakshi as he attempts to destroy the synthesizer, in which a flashback reveals that Pakshi protested against the usage of modern mobile phones, from which the radiation affected the brains of birds and caused mass deaths, especially near his bird sanctuary and home in Thirukazhukundram. Pakshi makes conferences and protests to address this, but the public dismisses and mocks him. Lula and Moorthy also reject his morals for their business and Jayanth Kumar shuns him from his shop as he tries to protest. Birds all over the city including Pakshi's sanctuary die out, including newborn chicks. A distraught and angered Pakshi, after even a court investigation found no violations (because telecom companies reduced signal levels to conceal wrongdoing), hangs himself at a cell tower. Pakshi's negatively charged spirit reawakens by the radiation emitting from the tower. By absorbing the souls of all the deceased birds in the city, he becomes a vengeful entity.

    Chitti tries to convince Pakshi not to hurt the public but Pakshi wishes to punish their ignorance. Chitti has Pakshi captured and contained. The news spreads to the council which decides to build an army of such robots for the military. Dhinendra, who becomes angered by Chitti's victory, releases Pakshi's spirit from the synthesizer. Pakshi possesses Vaseegaran and attacks the public again, but Chitti refuses to attack his creator. Nila gets the red chip and reprograms Chitti to his evil 2.0 alter ego, after altering it to not harm the innocent and commanding him only to fight Pakshi.

    Pakshi traps 80,000 people in a football stadium and kills Dhinendra, who was present, by focusing radiation from multiple cell towers. Chitti interferes and fights Pakshi's bird form with his army. As Chitti runs out of charge, Pakshi turns into his winged form and creates several bird drones. The drones tear the robots into pieces, but before Pakshi can summon radiation he's interrupted by one of Chitti's creations: the action figure bot Kutti 3.0. Released into the stadium by Nila, the Kutti bots mount themselves on doves, forcing Pakshi to stand down. The Kuttis self-destruct and destroy Pakshi's drones. After Vaseegaran is released from possession, Pakshi is led to the space station where he is destroyed.

    Vaseegaran recovers in the hospital and tells Vijay Kumar, who comes to see him, that he feels Pakshi Rajan was a virtuous person who became a victim of the corrupt society. He also suggests we reduce and control cell phone radiation and ensure that technology do not threaten the lives of all the living creatures in the world. Chitti, now restored to its original version, begins a relationship with Nila.

    In a post-credits scene, Sana asks Vaseegaran over the phone about the probability of mobile phones flying again. Immediately, Vaseegaran's mobile flies out of his hand and morphs into Kutti 3.0, saying, "I am your grandson".[2]

    3.0 (2026 film)

    [edit]

    Films

    [edit]
    Film Release date Director Screenwriter(s) Story by Producer(s)
    Enthiran 1 October 2010 S. Shankar Sujatha, S. Shankar S. Shankar Kalanithi Maran
    2.0 30 November 2018 Madhan Karky S. Shankar, B. Jeyamohan, Madhan Karky A. Subaskaran

    All two films of Enthiran Franchise take place between 2010 and 2018.

    Enthiran

    [edit]

    The first installment of the series, centers on the fictional incidents. Vaseegaran, a brilliant scientist, builds Chitti, a unique robot, who is programmed to protect mankind and also feel human emotions. Problems arise when Chitti falls in love with his girlfriend. Enthiran was released on 1 October 2010 (worldwide) and gained positive reviews.[3] It earned ₹290 crore worldwide [4] against a budget of ₹132 crore,[5] becoming one of the highest-grossing film in Indian history (2010).[citation needed]

    2.0

    [edit]

    After the success of Enthiran Shankar and Rajinikanth Re-unite once again for a sequel. The film was titled as 2.0 and it's a Standalone sequel to the previous one. And also second installment in this series. The plot focused on when mobile phones start flying from people's hands, Dr. Vaseegaran and his robot Nila are asked to help. However, due to Pakshi Rajan having a hand in this, the two have to reinstate Chitti to defeat him. 2.0 was released worldwide in both 3D and conventional format on 29 November 2018, along with its dubbed versions in Hindi and Telugu. It received mostly positive reviews upon release. Critics particularly praised the film's visual effects, performances of Rajinikanth and Akshay Kumar[6] It earned ₹117.34 crore (US$16 million) worldwide on its first day, which was the second-highest ever for an Indian film. The film crossed ₹520 crore (equivalent to ₹591 crore or US$78 million in 2020) in its opening weekend to be the highest-grossing film worldwide for that week. Total collection of the film is ₹800 crore. 2.0 is the ninth highest-grossing Indian film and is fourth highest grossing indian franchise.

    Recurring cast and characters

    [edit]

    This table lists the main characters who appear in the Enthiran Franchise.

    List indicator(s)

    This section includes characters who will appear or have appeared in Enthiran film series.

    Characters Films
    Enthiran (2010) 2.0 (2018) 3.0 (2026)
    Vaseegaran Rajinikanth
    Chitti
    Kutty RajinikanthC Rajinikanth
    Sana Aishwarya Rai Savitha ReddyV TBA
    Bohra Danny Denzongpa Danny DenzongpaA
    Pakshi Rajan Akshay Kumar
    Nila Amy Jackson TBA
    Dhinendra Bohra Sudhanshu Pandey
    Rehan Ikramullah Aamir Khan

    Additional crew and production details

    [edit]
    Occupation Film
    Enthiran
    (2010)
    2.0
    (2018)
    Director S. Shankar
    Screenplay
    Story
    Producer(s) Kalanithi Maran A. Subaskaran
    Presenter(s) Kalanithi Maran Karan Johar
    Dialogue Writer(s) S. Shankar S. Shankar
    B. Jeyamohan
    Madhan Karky (Dialogues)
    Music Director(s) A. R. Rahman
    Cinematography R. Rathnavelu Nirav Shah
    Editor(s) Anthony
    Visual Effects Supervisor(s) V. Srinivas Mohan
    Production Design(s) Sabu Cyril T. Muthuraj
    Sound Designer(s) Resul Pookutty
    Production Company Sun Pictures Lyca Productions
    Distributor(s) Sun Pictures Lyca Productions
    Dharma Productions
    AA Films
    Runtime 2h 57min 2h 27min

    Release and reception

    [edit]

    Box office

    [edit]
    Film Release date Budget Box Office
    Enthiran 1 October 2010 ₹150 crore (US$21.93 million)[Note 1] ₹250−320 crore(US$41.46 million)[10]
    2.0 29 November 2018 ₹400−600 crore (US$73.11 million)[11][12] ₹519−800 crore(US$110.56 million)[13]
    Total ₹690−750 crore (US$90-US$100 million) ₹769−1,120 crore (US$151.0-US$159.7 million)

    Note: The budget and box office collection in US$ is the average as there is many figures about the budget and box office collection according to many reports.

    Critical reception

    [edit]
    Film Rotten Tomatoes
    Enthiran 67% (12 reviews)[14]
    2.0 55% (20 reviews)[15]

    Both films received positive reviews, with praise for their direction, storyline, visual effects, music, action sequences, cinematography and cast performances (especially Rajinikanth).

    Notes

    [edit]
    1. ^ The Economic Times claims the film's budget to be 1.32 billion,[7] whereas Anirban Bhattacharya of CNN Travel and T. S. Sreenivasan Raghavan of Bangalore Mirror state that it is 1.62 billion.[8][9]

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ Sekar, Raja (29 November 2018). "2.0: Revisiting Shankar's Enthiran and how Rajinikanth became India's most loved superhero Chitti". First Post. Retrieved 25 December 2018.
  • ^ "Was Akshay Kumar's 2.0 character Pakshirajan inspired by Birdman of India Salim Ali?". Times Now. 1 December 2018. Retrieved 25 December 2018.
  • ^ Guha, Aniruddha (1 October 2010). "Robot (Endhiran) is an Indian film to be proud of". Daily News and Analysis. Archived from the original on 23 January 2015. Retrieved 1 October 2010.
  • ^ Dubey, Bharati (9 October 2010). "Rs 117 cr in just 7 days, 'Robot' Rajini smashes all records". The Economic Times. Archived from the original on 26 January 2013. Retrieved 9 October 2010.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  • ^ Bhattacharya, Anirban (7 October 2010). "Rajinikanth's 'Robot' to end all robots". CNN Travel. Archived from the original on 5 June 2016. Retrieved 5 June 2016.
  • ^ "2.0 (2018)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 25 December 2018.
  • ^ "Sun TV Network Q3 Net up 48.40% at Rs 225.49 cr". The Economic Times. Press Trust of India. 28 January 2011. Archived from the original on 4 February 2015. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  • ^ Bhattacharya, Anirban (7 October 2010). "Rajinikanth's 'Robot' to end all robots". CNN Travel. Archived from the original on 5 June 2016. Retrieved 5 June 2016.
  • ^ Raghavan, T. S. Sreenivasan (22 October 2010). "Chitti, the robot, delights tax officials". Bangalore Mirror. Archived from the original on 13 August 2018. Retrieved 13 August 2018.
  • ^ "SS Rajamouli's Baahubali enters RS 300 crore club". The Indian Express. 19 July 2015. Archived from the original on 19 September 2016. Retrieved 19 September 2016.
  • ^ Zoom TV Digital (11 September 2018). "Wow! Rajinikanth and Akshay Kumar's VFX-heavy film 2.0 cost Rs 543 crore - details inside". Times Now. Retrieved 11 September 2018.
  • ^ Bureau, City. "2.0 is set to go where no Indian film has gone before". The Hindu. Retrieved 13 May 2017.
  • ^ "2.0 Box Office Collection Day 23: Rajinikanth's magnum opus struggles to touch Rs 800-crore mark worldwide". Business Today. 22 December 2018. Retrieved 22 December 2018.
  • ^ "Endhiran (2010)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 25 December 2018.
  • ^ "2.0 (2018)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 25 December 2018.
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