Bharathirajaa who picked up the nuances of direction from such stalwarts as the Kannada director Puttana Kanagal, Telugu filmmaker Pullayya and the Malayalam auteur Krishnan Nair hailed from rural stock and had in his armoury a number of stories from village folklore which he successfully transposed on screen. In his debut film, for instance, there were three principal characters viz. Mayil, the village beauty (Sridevi), Chappani (Kamal) a village bumpkin with spittle drooling down his cheeks, her chaperone in the film, and the villain Parattai (Rajinikant) who has an eye on Mayil. The characters were well fleshed out and though there was a lot of melodrama, especially towards the climax, the film was a novel experience for the audience and Bharathirajaa was quick to cash in on his popularity with successive releases like "Kizhakke Pogum Rayil" and "Puthiya Vaarpugal" hitting the bull’s eye at the box office.