Thank you!

Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry's standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown ...

Minimal Design

Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry's standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown ...

Download high quality wordpress themes at top-wordpress.net

Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry's standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown ...

Easy to use theme admin panel

Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry's standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown ...

Archive for August 2014

Irumbu Kuthirai (Iron Horse) - Get set, doze!




Before watching this movie, I was a wee bit curious of its content! Curious, because the subject was on bike racing - I really can't recollect any movie in Tamil based on such a theme. So that was one good enough reason for me to catch up. I was also expecting some thrills and decent stunts coupled with an engaging story line - was I expecting too much? The answer is a resounding yes!!


The movie opens up with a biker whizzing past a flock of graphically created (read it as pathetically made out) crows, only to end up in a crash. The dream of Prithviraj (Atharva) dissolves and he reveals the fateful day where he lost his father due to his negligence in driving a motorbike. So we get a slice of his life where he is depicted as a typical happy-go lucky guy who works part-time at a pizza joint and always ends up delivering the pizza late (for free), thanks to his heedful driving. He obeys traffic rules, hates people driving rashly and is seen as an ideal boy-next-door by everyone surrounding him. He meets Samyuktha (Priya Anand) and its love at first sight - “best friends” as they call it. He even goes on to buy a Ducati in order to impress his best friend. Then comes a lame twist in the tale where he has to rekindle his racing instincts in order to win his girl back from the antagonist!!


Debut director Yuvraj Bose has undoubtedly wanted to deliver a glossy package of masala with the ever stale one-line story of ‘Ramayana’. But at this age of noir and neo-liberal movies, can't this story be made on a much more engaging scale?  The only relief that came in as a visual pleasure was that the movie was set in Pondicherry with it’s characteristic offbeat locales that partially gelled with the narrative.


Amongst the cast, only Devadarshini who has been demoted as Atharva’s mother has managed to score. Even Atharva looked lost and made one to feel that his performance in his last outing in ‘Paradesi’ was just a one off. Priya Anand as the trademark ‘loosu penn’ Tamil heroine had nothing going for her. Raai Laxmi was made to run around with skimpy clothes with hardly anything to offer, Johnny Triguyen was reduced to our ‘rowdy next door’ and Jegan who is supposed to have ushered in the comic relief was not given much space. Also GV Prakash’s music needs a facelift badly. The title BGM made me feel if the theater speakers were defective. It sounded horrible.


By the time the twist in the tale was revealed, half the audience were dozy enough and were not even ready to acknowledge that the last big race was coming their way. All we ended up was with a ridiculously packaged empty gift hamper after all the glossy covers that came of it.


Verdict: Give it a miss!

Rating: 1.5 / 5

Kathai Thiraikathai Vasanam Iyakkam (Story, Screenplay, Dialogs, Direction) - Silver-screen Metadata!!




KTVI (I just cannot write the full form every time!) goes with the tagline, “A film without a story”. That’s not entirely true. Director Parthipan has made a movie about movie makers who attempt to make a movie and their subsequent challenges. So what’s the need for that tagline? I am still clueless; maybe it should have been “A film without a proper story” - but again that is a relative statement and varies from every viewer!!


I am not going to dissect the movie as it has been already done so (at least partially) by the director himself during it’s course. And if there are any complaints with regards to its narrative structure, then the movie’s tagline would come to it’s rescue! Parthipan is no wonder an interesting personality in Kollywood as he has managed to carve a niche for himself on and off screen. Be it a speech at a public gathering or a literary work like ‘Kirukalgal’ - each work of his would bear his unique stamp. But, the problem is that what he believes to be his strength is also his weakness because he always tends to overdo things such that they become rhetoric at times.


KTVI can be classified partially as a rhetorical work of an enthusiastic director who vents out his frustrations and rants on the humongous hurdles one should overcome in order to churn out a movie, thereby mocking at the Kollywood bureaucracy with the help of a bunch of new faces who are stewarded by ‘Thambi’ Ramaiah who seem to anchor the innings with poise and balance. The movie had so many subplots without a plot. Even the climax is an open ended one where the director feels that today’s audiences are intelligent enough to comprehend according to the context, which he also conveys through his main lead.


Some mixed bag performances from his actors, a bunch of trademark ‘Parthipan one-liners’ and some funky narrative meta-structures with a handful of celebrity cameos (Vishal, Tapsee, Vijay Sethupathy, Arya, Amala Pal and Parthipan himself) made this movie somewhat watchable without much complaints!!


Verdict: Average

Rating: 2.5 / 5

Sathuranga Vettai (Con Hunt) - Con Handbook for Dummies!



Again it’s a late review and happened to catch up with this movie only 3 weeks after it’s release after reading so many rave reviews about it. The attempt was very unique, casting was well done and the script was engaging almost throughout.

A bunch of con men led by Gandhi Babu (Natarajan) go about swindling money from greedy merchants and general public by manoeuvring some uncanny tactics that ranges from selling multi-headed snake to Emu scandal to MLM scandal to rice pulling. Gandhi gets caught at times, but goes scot free, largely thanks to the bureaucratic system and “money power”! When he finds solace in the company of Banu (Ishara Nair), a victim of sort due to his own con game and prepares to settle down, he is confronted with a larger challenge to tackle. How he goes about beating the evil forces with his ever-handy con game forms the rest of the movie.

First thought that came to my mind as I was watching this movie was that it seemed to slyly blend a bit of ‘Thiruttu Payale’ and ‘Soodhu Kavvum’. Though the noir was the least common denominator of all these movies, the way in which the director goes about making the narrative much more engaging by narrating the tactics of the protagonist to con people (read as ‘greedy’ people) was like reading a ‘Sydney Sheldon’ thriller. He allows us to rattle our brains on what is the con mob upto before the actual act takes place and the tactic has worked out!! The heist pulled by the mob using the jewellery store is a perfect example for the above mentioned line of tactic used by the director.

Also each and every character performed to the script’s tune and made sure they justified their roles. Natarajan, the cinematographer turned actor was the perfect choice for the cunning protagonist’s role. The way he manages to con people was depicted so convincingly on screen such that it made good sense.

Songs and sentimental values at the end were a bit of a dampener but still the movie managed to race past the finishing line with a convincing script, peppered with dark humor and more than average performance by the artists!!

Rating: 3 / 5

Verdict: Good!

Jigarthanda - Cheers!!



For starters, Jigarthanda is a native drink of Madurai. It’s sweetened with different layers of essence. I happened to make a reference of this one in my review of ‘Sundarapandian’ a few years back.

‘Jigarthanda’ - one cannot think of a better title than this when the story is told with an effervescent and oft-used Madurai ethos (also I was mildly surprised at how film makers have till now left this title untouched, especially in Kollywood for every third movie hinges on the Madurai genre). Director Karthik Subbaraj who has captured the fancy of so many aspiring film makers with his ‘fairy-tale’ success story in Kollywood made a thumping debut with ‘Pizza’. Now Jigarthanda being his second movie, the expectations were naturally high, especially after the trailers went viral in the social media circuit. Also an itchy controversy like the postponement in release dates fueled its mileage, though I can undoubtedly admit that this movie would have not required such kind of publicity as it’s content spoke for itself and has strongly reinforced the fact that script is the real hero for any movie!

An aspiring director (Sidharth as ‘Karthik’) is faced with the challenge of developing a violent gangster script. In order to make the script look real, he decides to closely follow the life and times of a deadly gangster. He zeroes down on Sethu (Bobby Simha), a middle aged thug in Madurai who annihilates his detractors with poise. He goes about it smoothly until Sethu finds about it one day, where the twists and turns in the story start. From then on the movie was a total roller coaster ride until the climax where there was another twist which was awaiting.

The script was rock solid - every dialog of each character was carefully measured in order to make it linger with the mood of the narrative. The first half was really breezy and was a pleasure to watch, even though it was riddled with blood and gore. But the dark humor in the script kicked in when the narrative got overtly tarnished with bloodstains. Not sure if the director has done the research the same way as the lead in the movie did, but nothing can be taken away from the script as being overboard as it was made to look so very close to the reality.

Another major strength was the casting - the clear winner here is Simha as ‘Sethu’, the fierce thug of Madurai. An absolute delight to watch on screen. It required a matured and heavy performance with a streak of fickleness and psychotic traits.  Simha has just grabbed the opportunity and has walked away with a ton of trophies. His body language was menacing, so were his dialogs and the way in which he delivered them. The scene where his killer gets trapped in a public toilet and his ensuing reaction is something that might be referred in future in some screenplay writing workshops. A fabulous job and a great gift for Kollywood.

Siddharth, though had a stereotypical role as that of a city-slicker, deserves a pat on his back for sheerly accepting to play an almost second fiddle to Simha’s role. Time and again he gets bullied by the goons and he doesn’t retard, just because he cannot. That was as well the strength of this movie as the director didn’t want to delve into something like a normal man turning into a superman when pushed to a corner. The facts were told as-is.

Karunakaran as the cliched side-kick for Siddharth was another revelation. A couple of years back it would have been Santhanam for such roles, but now that there are options which by itself is a refreshing change.

Lakshmi Menon is the typical demure heroine who is there for a few songs and some romantic interludes, but when compared to other beautifully written roles, her’s was the weakest, but that can’t be helped.

There were a bunch of cameos as well - however the pick of the pack was Vijay Sethupathy in the flashback scenes. His part was very catchy and garnered whistles from the crowd. Sidekicks for Simha were also hand picked well. Their variety in roles came in handy and made the dark humor get elevated to the next level. Another noteworthy mention is Guru Somasundaram as the acting trainer - truly amazing (watch out for his off-screen comment of “virgin rowdy” - I laughed with tears in my eyes upon realizing what he mentioned)!!

Music by Santhosh Narayanan was already a hit! His Gibberish song made its relevance felt to the audience only after it was watched fully! BGM was amazing, a lot many times Ilayaraja BGMs were used but segued well with the classy ones that has been heavily influenced by symphonies from the west!!

Cinematography by Gavemic was top notch - the camera traveled with the characters throughout - again watch out for the scene where Simha walks through a narrow passage only to reach a narrower passage that leads to a filthy toilet where characters converse, before the scene breaks into a mini warzone. Also the art department has played its part in detailing the scenes - watch out for the lights clad with a vehicle tyre over Siddharth and Lakshmi Menon during a conversation. The frames were brilliantly captured and Madurai was painted with his own colors - perhaps he has Photoshopped the city with his color palette!!

The length of the movie is almost 3 hours - the second half seemed a bit stretched by 15 - 20 minutes, but I’m sure Karthik would have his own reasons to dwell upon. I wouldn’t like to blame the editor for that. Editing on the whole had neat and intelligent cuts.

A hell lot of research would have gone into pre-production as this subject would have demanded a freshly brewed Madurai jigarthanda unlike what Kollywood would have tasted in the past. A slight representation of the ‘Saurashtra’ culture is one such example. We wouldn’t have seen that in any movie till now or even now people would be wondering whether such people even exist in Tamil Nadu. In another scene where a politician who romances his keep wearing a titanic mask and getting shot by Simha where he wears the same mask is another example at a brilliant piece of writing.
Renewed blood is pumped through this new age cinema from a new age director who is keen at mastering the language of cinema. I’m sure such efforts would not only be lauded but rewarded promptly.

PS: Blood, gore and usage of explicit language time and again has earned an adult certificate for this movie. Appropriate viewer discretion is advised.

Rating: 3.5 / 5

Verdict: Go for it!!