The film was censored on 30 December 1964 and sent for the
12th National Film Awards (1964). However, it got released only on 27 February 1965. Jayakanthan released the film himself as the distributors backed out citing there were no known actors in the film. It won the
Third Best Feature Film at the National Film Awards ceremony. The film is widely considered by the critics as the first
neorealistic film in
Tamil cinema. It started a new wave and is seen as a trendsetter for realistic films in Tamil cinema. Despite receiving critical acclaim, the film was a failure at the box office. It was also screened at the
Soviet Union. Politician
K. Kamaraj appreciated the film, saying the Government must enable the public to watch this film freely so that the message of the film could reach out better and to larger audiences. French film critic
Georges Sadoul praised it as a "neo-realistic masterpiece". However, Jayakanthan's family posted the film on his birth anniversary 24 April 2023 on YouTube.
Ananda Vikatan, in a review dated 7 February 1965, wrote that Jayakanthan was bringing in a new wave with the film. The reviewer added that the realistic and new wave film would making everyone watch it at least once. == References ==