Rithesh) talks to her but is distracted by another problem, and so Sandhya has to bank on Shakti again. Initially reluctant, he agrees to help Sandhya and drops the phone off at a police station. One of her calls reaches Sakthi ( Ramana), who has his own set of problems since he is on the run after eloping with his uncle's daughter Divya ( Keerthi Chawla). Though the phone in her room is smashed by the gang's leader ( Anandaraj), she manages to put together enough broken pieces to make random calls. Sandhya Viswanath ( Sangeetha) is kidnapped from her home by a gang and taken to another location, where she is questioned about her husband's whereabouts.
Nayagan 2008 movie#
The movie released on 22 August 2008, was a direct remake of the movie Vegam, released in 2007, which itself was an uncredted remake of the 2004 American action thriller film Cellular. The film features guest appearances in item numbers by Anita Hassanandani and Rachana Maurya. It was subsequently dubbed into Telugu as Ankusam. Rithesh, Ramana, Sangeetha, Keerthi Chawla, Anita Hassanandani, and Anandaraj. Anything other than that reeks of all that DC Earth 1, Earth 2, Earth Prime stuff which I’ve never really taken to, but then again, I got into DC when they got rid of all that stuff so it was from and for a different era than my own.Nayagan (English: Hero) is a 2008 Indian Tamil language film directed by Saravana Sakthi, produced by Chakya Celluloid, and written by Vijaykumar Reddy. I think the term really came into vogue when the Ultimate Universe came into prominence, but in my world, the language and distinctions are simple, there is the Marvel Universe and the Ultimate Universe. I can’t remember ever hearing it in the office and only really see it used online for the most part. I never use it, I hate the term pure and simple and agree with Tom’s assessment of it. It just sounds so stupid to my ear, and so counter to the kind of mindset we try to foster in regard to the stories we create and the thinking we try to employ. I can tell you for sure that those of us actually working on the books virtually never use the term-and I kind of wince inside whenever I hear somebody use it. Editorial reactionįormer Marvel Editor in Chief Joe Quesada and Executive Editor Tom Brevoort have each stated their dislike for the term Earth-616. In Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., the plane Phil Coulson's team flies in is called "S.H.I.E.L.D. Ulaga Nayagan (Come Dance With Me), from the album Dhasavathaaram, was released in the year 2008. Ulaga Nayagan (Come Dance With Me) is a Tamil language song and is sung by Himesh Reshammiya and Vinit. Near the center of all of this, the words "616 universe" can be seen underlined. About Ulaga Nayagan (Come Dance With Me) Listen to Ulaga Nayagan (Come Dance With Me) online. In the film Thor: The Dark World, Erik Selvig is portrayed as being somewhat mentally unstable and in his time at a mental hospital he draws a number of diagrams and equations on a blackboard. In a superhero themed episode of NCIS, an excused suspect states "Why on Earth-616 would I know?" The actor pronounces each digit, referring to "Earth six one six". In the climaxes of the "Goblin Nation" and "Spider-Verse" storylines in Superior Spider-Man and The Amazing Spider-Man, respectively, it is revealed that Marvel 2099/Earth-928 is the same universe as 616, dubbed as Earth-616 circa 2099. In 2005, Moore's son-in-law John Reppion (married to Moore's daughter Leah Moore) stated on an Internet message board that the number 616 was arbitrarily chosen by Moore, saying it "was just a random number of no significance chosen because people always seemed to be talking about 'earth 2' or 'earth 4' but never any higher numbers." However, Davis has said that it comes from 616, a variation on the Number of the Beast, picked because Thorpe "wasn't a fan of the modern superhero genre" and expressed this in his stories, "such as recording his opinion of the Marvel Universe with the designation 616."
However, Alan Davis has stated that the designation of Earth 616 was actually first made by Dave Thorpe, the previous writer of the UK-published Captain Britain stories.Ī difference of opinion exists regarding the selection of the number 616.
Davis later had a run as both writer and artist on the book.Īlan Moore is usually credited with creating the term. This comic was written by Chris Claremont, who had created Captain Britain, and pencilled by Alan Davis, the artist on the UK-published series. The designation was later used by the American branch of Marvel Comics in the Excalibur title, which frequently referenced Captain Britain's early UK-published adventures. Saturnyne uses the term to differentiate Brian Braddock, the Captain Britain of the regular Marvel Comics universe, from the other members of the Captain Britain Corps, each of which inhabit different universes.
The term was first used in "Rough Justice", a story credited to both Alan Moore and Alan Davis published in July 1983 by Marvel UK in the anthology comic The Daredevils (and was later reprinted in the Captain Britain trade paperback).