While Alibabavum 40 Thirudargalum may be lost to time, its place in history is secure. It is not just the first colour film in Tamil; it is a symbol of the industry’s enduring ambition to push beyond the limits of technology and imagination.
However, colour was still prohibitively expensive. After this landmark film, Tamil cinema retreated back to black and white for another seven years. Colour films remained a rarity until the mid-1960s, when the iconic Karnan (1964, starring Sivaji Ganesan and N. T. Rama Rao) popularized colour on a grand scale using Eastmancolor. Tragically, like many early Indian films, Alibabavum 40 Thirudargalum is now considered a lost film . No known complete prints survive. The Gevacolor stock, while revolutionary, was prone to severe fading and discoloration over time. Attempts to recover prints from private collections or international archives (like the National Film Archive of India) have so far failed. Only a few still photographs and the gramophone records of its songs remain as evidence of its once-vibrant glory. Conclusion: The Forgotten Pioneer When we celebrate the visual splendour of modern Tamil blockbusters like Enthiran or Ponniyin Selvan , we owe a silent debt to a 1956 gamble in a Coimbatore studio. S. M. Sriramulu Naidu took a financial risk to prove that Tamil stories deserved to be seen in all their natural colour.
That all changed in 1956. The man who brought a rainbow to the Tamil screen was not a director or a hero, but a visionary producer and a magician of technology: .