Director Prem Nizar debuts with 'Ishtam', which is a remake of the Telugu average grosser 'Yemaindi Ee Vela'. Depicting the current generation's attitude towards life and relationships, the movie ends up taking a half-baked stand on the schema of things, neither being entirely loyal to the current happenings nor taking a plunge into the cinematic aspects of script writing.
The story of Ishtam revolves around the lead characters of Vimal and Nisha Agarwal, who fall in love due to circumstantial compulsions in a clichéd manner, enjoy a pre-marital relationship before getting married without their parents' consent. Post marriage the misunderstandings creep into their lives, leading to silly arguments, consequently resulting in their break-up. Vimal finds another partner for his second marriage and so does Kajal, only to find out that their true love still holds good and then they re-unite at the end making the story pale and boring for 2 hours and 30 minutes.
The problem was primarily with the screenplay and characterization which lacked originality. The director's false pre-text on a large section of today's youth was flawed and was over-blown in order to take the movie forward. Sadly that affected the acting skills of the artists as well. Certain scenes did have the appearance of being perfectly staged and thus the consequent off-the-shelf performances were disappointing to watch.
The lead characters who essayed the roles of today's IT cultured youth have hardly managed to do any justice. Vimal, going for an image make-over from being a village boy-next door to a modern youth has sadly lost track, especially his English phonetic with a crude Tamil accent was a bit embarrassing to put up with [Gaat it (for Got it) and Kaalculative (for calculative) would stand as samples]. Nisha Agarwal, the younger sibling of Kajal, was a 'lighter' version of Kajal in every sense, including her ability to emote.
Santhaanam sadly walked through the entire movie with a yawn and managed to pass muster with his not-so-funny one liners this time around. He has to re-invent himself every now and then in order to keep up with the expectations which are on the rise with each role that he takes up these days.
Thaman's music has certainly failed without much impact and hampers the movie's pace towards the climax.
The movie falls flat and takes a beating primarily because of its inability to have a genuine appeal and rides on a falsely clichéd premise.
Verdict: Waste of time!
Rating: 1/5



