Posts Tagged ‘Amazon Prime’

A pulverizing anti message film

For a Vikram film, which was preposterously titled ‘Mahaan’, this happened to be a quickie. With the first single of the movie too not creating much hype and falling under regular troupe of Santhosh Narayanan’s latest outings, it looked like it was going to be the same old story of any Vikram movie but the real attention started with the teasers and trailers where the film felt appealing. But the puzzle solved itself only after watching the movie. In fact the whole setup was to make audience think of something else and come up with something wholly different.

There is a short, not so appealing flashback at the start with three kids involving in a game of cards. It happens so quick that we don’t get a grasp of it. One of the kid Gandhi Mahaan, ends up to be the forty year old Vikram in the next scene, who has to abide by the rules his family, society has framed/set for him. It was a pleasure to watch Vikram do such a subtle under performance in the beginning but it doesn’t last long as he gets a free license for a day. His wife Nachi (an amazing Simran) and his kid Dadabhai Naoroji leave him because of the incident. From that point to interval it was just a pleasure watching Vikram on screen. Time and again he shows what an actor he is. He is a straight out Hollywood material who could match up with the likes of Al Pacino and De Niro in a Scorsese gangster flick.

The three friends unite together at most interesting points. In fact any character who appears for a scene, reunites at superb juncture. Sathya (Bobby Simha) at gambling, Gnanam (Vettai Muthukumar) when they plan to get a seemingly impossible license for their drink and Manikkam (Ramachandran) at his lone birthday party. In fact its Manikkam’s words which makes a seemingly innocent Gandhi turn into Mahaan. Isn’t it just apt that Gandhi thinks of only Manikkam during his birthday? And the chemistry between all of them with Vikram was fabulous. None looked like lesser known actors. It was great to see so much comfort level on screen.

It was good to see Karthik Subbaraj trying to come out of comfort zone. He could have easily done a normal gangster movie with Vikram and could have gotten away with it as a runaway hit but the path he takes in second half and establishes a lead actor without questioning his morality was brilliant. Pro Gandhian, Pro Alcohol or pro or anti of anything is not easy to establish. But he does it with élan. The scene where Dada (Dhruv) refuses to drink alcohol was such a lively scene. It could have been easily laughed at. If it had been laughed at, the film would have been a failure. Only because the emotions of it could be understood, it makes for a compelling watch.

Karthik had tried to do something different with ‘Iraivi’ and ‘Jagame Thandhiram’ but couldn’t. With ‘Iraivi’ it got too personal and self-righteous and with ‘Jagame Thandhiram’ it got too hollywoodish, so much so that it looked plasticky. But with Mahaan he held his ground even though he had not aced it. There were few brilliant scenes where the emotions were stripped off, like, every time Vikram thinks of family, it doesn’t happen for more than a couple of seconds, he laughs it off with his peers dismissing that his past life was nothing but crap. (Something like Ranbir brushing of Deepika rejecting her proposal in ‘Tamasha’ but that was not as subtle as ‘Mahaan’) Karthik could have easily made those scenes a cry fest and made us empathize with Vikram. But he doesn’t, and that’s the beauty. In one of the scenes he so effortlessly dismisses his wife Nachi from his life. He says something like, “avala epovo thooki potachu, payana than maraka mudila”. It’s so cruel a scene which I’m afraid whether other actors would have done it but it happens so effortlessly in the movie.

Climax is where the entire villainess of Gandhi comes to fore. It was a treat to watch Vikram in full flow. Like my friend commented, Vikram gave an audition for ‘Marudhanayagam’ with his ‘Hey Ram’ caricature. Dhruv who was trying so hard to match with Vikram in the face off scenes had to succumb completely in the climax. In fact he obeying his dad in film felt more real than the remaining scenes. Gandhi calling him a puppy in the call to Gnanam was probably the cruelest scene of the movie. May be the people who couldn’t connect with the movie citing that they couldn’t understand the emotions were actually the ones who couldn’t digest the fact that the lead needn’t always have to be a morally correct person.

The length of the film felt justified. May be it could have explored more about Dada and the flashback sequences. The actors, especially the trio of Vikram, Bobby Simha and Vettai Muthukumar were terrific. Even Sananth as Rocky was brilliant. In fact everyone were, except for Dhruv. May be it’s a miscasting. He was not bad, in fact a lot better than I expected but he was forced with a herculean task to match up with Vikram. Karthik or may be Vikram wanted the character to be macho and tried to add a lot of cool factors like Vikram’s previous mannerisms and dialogues but it was a total put off. May be a cop who hardly talks and generally broody in nature would have appealed more.

Overall it was a superb movie with Vikram and it was like showing the next generation what he’s capable of. People who are newly discovering him (thanks to a series of flops) would have been wondering why was he not in limelight all through the years.

Guess by now, people have even forgotten that we’re in lockdown. But back then in march it was a different exercise. What started as a guilty pleasure became an obsession of late and I made it a point that I share at least one review per day. And sometime back I decided to list them up as I’m a big fan of lists. It’s funny to think of it that I’ve did this joblessly which amounted to a total of 278 movies this year. But that’s how I’ve been all through my life.

So here you go… with all the movies listed in one of the three categories below with a link to my review…

Good

This is the best of best. Sema, vera level, chance e illa and all these adjectives join the group. Only the elite get into it and luckily for me there were a lot of films I could add it up in the category.

Ayyappanum Koshiyum
Tumbbad
Gully Boy
Avane Srimannarayana
Thithi
Parched
Badlapur
The Irishman
Gantumoote
Ugly
The Shape of Water
Asha Jaoar Majhe
Agent Sai Srinivasa Athreya
October
Killa
Firaaq
Ee.Ma. Yau
Maqbool
Orphan
Joker (2019)
Ishq (2019)
Dallas Buyers Club
Uncut Gems
Dil Se..
Kapoor & sons
Jonaki
Talvar
Tu Hai Mera Sunday
Ee Nagaraniki Emaindhi
Udta Punjab
Crazy, Stupid, Love
Ghatasraddha
About Time
Anantaram
Les Diaboliques
Striker
Synecdoche, Newyork
Collateral
Brahman Naman
Vidheyan
Bulbbul
The Tale of Princess Kaguya
The Last Samurai
Mathilukal
Meesaya Murukku
BlacKkKlansman
Badhaai Ho
Steel Rain
Tune in for Love
The Stoneman Murders
Action Hero Biju
Irandam Ulagaporin Kadaisi Gundu
Raat Akeli Hai
Parava
Baby Driver
Only Yesterday
Dolemite Is My Name
June
Thondimuthalum Driksakshiyum
The Raid
Peranbu
Amar Prem
Aadai
Detective Byomkesh Bakshy!
A Death in the Gunj
Jogwa
HIT: The First Case
Raman Raghav 2.0
Ladies vs Ricky Bahl

Bad

Actually, this is the average category and just about anything gets into it. Some great films which didn’t work for me, some bad films which worked for me, time pass ones etc.

Oh My Kadavule
Jiivi
Highway
K.G.F Chapter 1
Dheepan
Contagion
Brochevarevarura
Predestination
Don’t Breathe
Driving License
Dharala Prabhu
Inland Empire
Sila Samayangalil
Unarchigal
Kannum Kannum Kollaiyadithaal
Kuttram Kadithal
Kavaludaari
Varane Avashyamund
Mother!
Nathicharami
The Pianist
Mathu Vadalara
U Turn (2018)
Jallikattu (2019)
50 First Dates
Manmadha Leelai
Photograph
Android Kunjappan Ver 5.25
Maragadha Naanayam
Merku Thodarchi Malai
Shoplifters
English Vinglish
Real Steel
Mard Ko Dard Nahi Hota
Moondru Mudichu
K.D.
Sinister
Vikrithi
Ek Main Aur Ekk Tu
Unda
Karwaan
The Great Gatsby
Her
Herbert
Helen
Kshana Kshanam
Looper
Birbal Trilogy Case 1 Finding Vajramuni
Jyeshthoputro
Hey Jude
Nani’s Gang Leader
Sin City
Chitralahari
Maachis
Rosemary’s Baby
Capernaum
Njan Prakashan
Masaan
Gandu
The Imitation Game
Mayurakshi
Awe!
Mallesham
Maacher Jhol
Ek Hasina Thi
Paan Singh Tomar
The Notebook
The Informant!
From Up on Poppy Hill
Pyaar Ka Punchnama 2
Psychokinesis
Moonnam Pakkam
Ivan’s Childhood
Sherlock Jr.
Kanasemba Kudureyaneri
Ohm Shanthi Oshaana
The President’s Barber
Take Off
Nautanki Saala
Krishna and His Leela
C U Soon
Bela Seshe
Arrietty
Spadikam
Manu
Kappela
Seoul Searching
Article 15
Iyobinte Pusthakam
Yavanika
Schindler’s List
Whisper of the Heart
Ek Ladki Ko Dekha Toh Aisa Laga
Bala
Koode
Vanilla Sky
North 24 Kaatham
1942: A Love Story
Sarvam Thaala Mayam
Unforgiven
Soorarai Pottru
Oththa Seruppu Size 7
Varathan
Fukrey
Fukrey Returns
Vellai Pookal
The Wailing
Kettyolaanu Ente Malakha
Fan
The Raid 2
Ishqiya
Dedh Ishqiya
The Twelve Tasks of Asterix
To Let
Dangerous Beauty
Newton
Paava Kadhaigal
War
22 Female Kottayam
Anand
Lipstick Under My Burkha
Moonlight
Pelli Choopulu

Ugly

These were the ones which was to my utter dismay. Something which I couldn’t stand and thought was a total waste of time. There could be good movies too in the list but if it had totally not worked for me, I’d have added them in there.

Kali
Raazi
Psycho (2020)
Vazhakku Enn 18/9
Paa
2.0
Okja
Annayum Rasoolum
Maya
Sudani from Nigeria
Manam
Pickpocket
Dia
Visaranai
Raja Vaaru Rani Gaaru
The Lunchbox
Manusangada
Virus (2019)
Snowpiercer
Trance
Midnights Children
Jagat
Roma
Marriage Story
Arrival
Dil Dhadakne Do
Joseph
The Wind Rises
Sindhooram
Mughal-E-Azam
Aithe
Sin City A Dame to Kill For
Trapped
Okkadunnadu
The Tourist
Choked
Tope
Uyare
Seven Years in Tibet
12 Years a Slave
Shuddhi
The Town
The Half of It
Parama
5 Sundarikal
Amen
City of God (2011)
Kerala Café
Ki & Ka
Madras Café
Sulemani Keeda
The Ghostwriter
Yahaan
The Theory of Everything
Joker (2016)
Escape from Alcatraz
Sanju
Oru Vadakkan Selfie
J. Edgar
Hero (2019)
Bhaag Milkha Bhaag
Ennu Ninte Moideen
American Hustle
NGK
True Grit
Eeda
Flushed Away
Time to Hunt
Putham Pudhu Kaalai
She’s Gotta Have It
Forgotten
Oru Indian Pranaya Kadha
In the Line of Fire
The Big Short
Da 5 Bloods
Athiran
Padosan
Room
Silsila
Goodachari
Honey Boy
Woh Kaun Thi
Aradhana
Silencer (2020)
An Evening in Paris
Gulabo Sitabo

Where old is mistaken for antique

Wonder what’s all the fuss about. First of all, I didn’t like a heavy prosthetic clad Amitabh in a Shoojit Sircar film. Shoojit Sircar is a master storyteller who weaves magic with his screenplay. So, it was kind of weird to see a man, that too with a caliber of Amitabh, in such heavy make-up. It’s understandable for a R. Balki movie like ‘Paa’, but Shoojit Sircar, hell, no! Guess all the talks about ‘Gulabo Sitabo’ was similar to ‘Soorarai Potru’ where both were a landmark film because it released in OTT. Otherwise, it felt like just another average joe.

‘Gulabo Sitabo’ is a boring film. Unfortunately, there is no better to put. In fact, this looks to be weakest of Shoojit Sircar films, only next to ‘Yahaan’. But ‘Yahaan’ was his debut feature and the director still didn’t have his style so he was just finding his ways so that’s pretty much forgivable. But ‘Gulabo Sitabo’ was too ambitious and it ended up being a bad painting which the maker considered to be a modern art. Guess there would be people defending this film too like how they do for any slow film but this film was outright boring.

It has some of the finest performers on screen. In fact, everyone who appeared on screen, whether their role was short or long were fabulous. Special mention to Farrukh Jaffar, what an actor she is and how underutilized. Begum was the only spot of charm in an otherwise dull movie. Even though it was a black comedy and all that, I was happy that Begum wins at last.

The bloating fact of the movie is that it’s a black comedy. But when a genre like black comedy becomes a genre movie, it has to be handled very carefully. Black comedies are something which must make us think, which must make us feel whether we should be laughing or crying for a scene. Or control our laughter and feel proud when others don’t get it. But this time, that kind of feeling was hardly there for any scenes. Maybe I was on the other side of spectrum, the clueless gang. But I don’t think so, there is even another side. It was straightforward and mundane. The opening scene where Chunnan “Mirza” Nawab (Amitabh Bachchan) steals the bulb and the climax scene where he and Baankey Rastogi (Ayushmann Khurrana) look at the haveli were some classic black comedy scenes which should’ve made us laugh a lot more.

Ayushmann Khurrana underplays his character and as usual blends in the film. So much so that, here we don’t feel he’s a lead. He hardly has any impact. It was good to see actors taking such “unimportant” characters. With the way the film took its own sweet time to establish, I thought it’s going to be a movie like ‘October’ which is my absolute favorite but ‘Gulabo Sitabo’ ended up being timid and unresponsive, especially after we get to know what’s the story about. All the walks to and fro for legal procedures were just like those mundane uninteresting walks one takes to go to office.

Look at the magic in ‘October’. It’s one of the toughest films to make. The leading lady falls off from a great height at the very start of the film and probably that’s the highest point of the film, there is no “action” as such in the entire film after that. There is no surficial high point. Everything happens inside and off screen and that transforms to us too. How tough it is to visualize such a concept and what great acting by Varun Dhawan too. That’s the film which made me take notice of him and want to complete his entire filmography.

Another classic film of his which I watched without knowing about the greatness of the director was ‘Piku’ and how wonderful was Amitabh in that. So naturally I was intrigued for Amitabh’s performance in this film too but expect for that one scene where he explains why Begum married there, there wasn’t any scene where I could enjoy the acting. Too much prosthetics to even feel that it’s Amitabh out there. Like I said before, it was okay for a fun film like ‘Paa’ but not for a heavy film like ‘Gulabo Sitabo’.

A mundane yet tense movie with some terrific acting

It’s a curious movie alright but not something I was ready after a hard day’s night. Seeing Shia LaBeouf in the acting and writing credits I thought it would be a time pass fun movie on the lines of a ‘Eagle Eye’ or a ‘Transformers’ but ‘Honey Boy’ ended up to be a rather serious movie. So serious that it got a physically tired me to be mentally tired too. But credit has to be given to Shia LaBeouf who was terrific in the film and its amazing that this dude could write too.

The film opens with an interesting scene with Otis Lort (Lucas Hedges) staring at us in the camera and gets suddenly pulled back. We then get to know about his life and how he’s dealing with extreme alcohol problem. Actually, as much as he’s adorable in his younger self (Noah Jupe), Otis gets on our nerves as an adult. As the film progresses, we get to know that his behavior is nothing but another version of his dad James Lort (Shia LaBeouf) who’s an outright asshole. Actually, its Shia LaBeouf and Noah Jupe who carry their film on their shoulders but the situations are so claustrophobic and it gets on us. May be the makers could have resorted to make it less mundane. I had the same problem with ‘Marriage Story’ too. It was as mundane as life actually is. This is where Iranian films are so good at. Even the lifelike films are made so romantically that we can’t help but fall in love with sorrow.

We get to see the flashback of Otis where he gets spluttered by a cake, which again comes as a shocker. It’s ten years back and life has been pretty much the same for him. Having been brought up in a hostile environment he yearns for love which he doesn’t get it through his father. But thankfully James Lort’s character was superbly written instead of being a unidimensional hateaable father. Much unlike Daniel Day Lewis in ‘There will be Blood’. Here the character is more relatable, even though hateable. Whereas in ‘There will be blood’ it was monstrous.

The track between a young Otis and the Shy Girl (FKA Twigs) was inevitable. Even if it looked forced, it was a sigh of relief for making us a little excited in an otherwise heavy movie. Mostly in a movie like this, it’s the forced conclusion which hurts the most. Because it takes the side of one person and the past is left in jeopardy but here it was good to see that his father was still a bad guy till the end. Neither miracles nor disaster happen in a flash, it’s a flow process, may be marijuana is just a start of it.

The problem with the movie was its too much an US movie. May be serious movie watches based out on USA would have liked it for its life like resemblance. They’d have been able to relate to it in a better manner but I was not, it was constantly drifting away no matter how much I concentrate. Alexander Paine, a similar film maker, whose products work wonderfully well for me is an exception. Especially while watching ‘The Descendants’ I was wondering how the hell did a pucca American movie worked for me. May be those are the master’s traits.

A momentary success

“Paya pudichitan… elaam Technology,” said Delhi Ganesh about Suriya in Ayan and eleven years after that’s what exactly he has done, by releasing his movie in OTT platform. With no problem for First Day First Show tickets not being available, everyone who were interested in the movie watched first day first show at the luxury of their home. But what’s special is, it made even someone who’d not have been really that interested to watch First Day First Show of the movie too, to have watched it on the very first day. Thanks to the curiosity. There might have been few films to release directly in OTT platform before this one but this is the first star movie to release. It’s definitely not an easy decision to make, in spite of not being a fan of Suriya, I highly appreciate that.

Ideally this is what Kamal would have wanted with his ‘Viswaroopam’. It became a blockbuster and was enjoyed widely in theatres along with the typical theatre moments like the transformation scene. But all that is a different issue. Down the line, like how ‘Alibabavum 40 Thirudargalum’ would be remembered as first colour film, this would be remembered as first major OTT film. I too watched the film with same curiosity like many. I don’t remember following the updates of any Surya film before that. May be ‘Ghajini’, that too just to make sure that it’s not as good as ‘Anniyan’. But that’s it.

The movie opens with the trailer scene where a Deccan Air flight is trying to land and conveniently every swear word which Nedumaaran Rajangam/Maara/Maaran (Suriya) says is not lip synced on screen. Either it is a clever move to avoid censors or Suriya being a typical goody goody guy didn’t want to swear on screen. But it doesn’t matter, the swear words don’t have an impact here like a Vetrimaran film or isn’t used in a fancy fashion like a GVM movie. Vijay Kumar has to be appreciated for ingenuine writing. In Sudha Kongra’s previous movie, ‘Irudhi Suttru’ too the swear words were so ingenuine. Plus, Maddy’s character demanded it, which he delivered to perfection. I still remember the last dialogue to the association head, “tha ne gaali da”

The movie doesn’t take a linear screenplay, may be Sudha wanted to make a more impactful film so there is a high-tension opening scene, a sad interval scene and again a high climax. I don’t see any other reason for making the film in nonlinear fashion. Anyways that doesn’t affect the flow of the film. The songs do though, which is a problem with any Tamil film. The director has tried her best to make a fast-paced biographical movie, which is not at all easy unless you’re a Scorsese but whenever songs appear, no matter how good it is, it spoils the flow. Even while I was watching with the family, I was intrigued and had a conversation only during the songs. That’s something that could have been taken care.

Suriya does a fabulous job in the movie. Even the name suits him so much. Generally, no matter how hard he performs he looks desperate but here he has great screen presence. Thanks to the tight frames where they haven’t given him space in the open, all our concentration lies on him. The two best scenes of the movie where the one where his country people give him money and the climax scene. Both being emotional ones he performs really well. In fact, that’s the plus point of the movie, it’s something which audience could emotionally connect to.

Aparna Balamurali too does a fabulous job. I recently watched ‘Sarvam Thaala Mayam’ and wasn’t much impressed of her but here he does a fabulous job. Especially with her diction of Tamil. She matches Suriya scene to scene. Paresh Rawal as Paresh Goswami too does a fair job and so does Prakash Belawadi as Prakash Babu. Wish the latter had been the villain as I’m a big fan of him. He could have added more dimension to the story. Mohan Babu as M. Bhaktavatsalam Naidu got to be cutest hateable person on screen.

Overall, the movie would win hearts, it has its moments but still like how ‘24’ is enjoyable but not a coherent film, ‘Soorarai Pottru’ too feels the same. It’s a tad lengthy, the situations are repetitive with the hero going down on one scene and raising from ashes in the next scene. It happens again and again. Instead the director could have invested on one situation and built the scene through it, rather than giving moments of excellence again and again, something on the lines of ‘Guru’. By the time the film ends, we lose connect to the character, it becomes evident that he’d anyways win. It in a way is a mark of losing interest but thankfully it doesn’t go to that level. What should have been an edge of the seat thriller becomes a drama film with time.

Sudha Kongara is good at making star vehicles without it being called so. ‘Irudhi Suttru’ too treaded on the same lines which worked more because it was like a comeback movie of Madhavan. Similarly, this movie too works more as Suriya’s different attempt rather than being a different movie. It being a biographical movie can be cited as an excuse but that can’t last long.

What starts like a loveable lockdown romance ends up being a numbing corona tale

The theme is lockdown and there are five films about it, the number of mentions of lockdown and corona would be a nice exercise to do while watching the short films because almost every film has a mention of it, a number of times. As if we haven’t heard the news and read the newspapers enough, the terms are annoying to the core. And given the limitations, all filmmakers try really hard to do something worthwhile where some end up successful and some end up desperate but everyone end up doing literal tales with very little cinematic value.

Let’s look at each of the films, one by one.

Ilamai Idho Idho

The first film is generally a make or break film when it comes to an anthology. So, it has to be carefully selected so that it sets the mood right plus the other films has to be better than the first one, otherwise audience will easily lose interest. ‘Ilamai Idho Idho’ works for its curiosity and terrific cast. Even though Kalidas and Kalyani are cute as a young couple, it’s the seasoned campaigners Jayaram and Urvashi who steal the show. At first when they transformed to young self, I was disappointed because it felt like an insult to old age, to employ young people to act them out but the mix and match of cast worked well as a whole.

Coming from a lady director, the eye for details is amazing, the spoon in the bowl and wet towel on bed are like every household’s melodrama, which one a woman can note. May be for an upper middle-class person with maids to support for every need, this might look cute. But for an average individual, they’d know how annoying these things can get. After the drama, the film ends on a happy note too. Well begun is half done.

Avarum Naanum – Avalum Naanum

The titles, voice over, a delayed heroine entry, English speaking people. You know you’re in for a GVM retreat. Thankfully its not a love story but a story between a grandad and his granddaughter which is done in the same romantic way as how Jessie meets Karthik. Needless to say, M. S. Bhaskar is excellent, for a change, as an educated urban scientist and Ritu Varma as an IT employee, who from a recent hangover of ‘Oru Manam’ looks all the more fabulous as a GVM heroine.

Of all the shorts, this one feels the least desperate, even though there are a lot of mentions of mask and corona. There is an overtly dramatic scene between them both, where the subject is excellent but dialogues were written very poorly, a trademark GVM mistake. Thanks to the cast, they make the scene work. I loved the idea of how a man feels for her daughter’s loss of passion, it’s a great subject which GVM has touched upon but it doesn’t carry on with the same flow. Like any other GVM film, more than the film, we end up loving the heroine and her costumes.

Coffee, Anyone?

The film’s downfall starts from here. A tale of sisters, something which should have had a Jane Austen flair, falls flat because of over enthusiasm of real-life sisters, Anu Hassan and Suhasini Maniratnam, through acting and directing, respectively. Obviously Suhasini has directed because whoever came up with the idea, discussed with their peers and decided to do a lockdown film, it’s not that they hunted for talents. So, this is a pretty bleak subject. An ailing mother whom we first think has corona but thankfully not, her three daughters, one of whom had born late and a father who takes care of wife.

The film is about hope but its as hopeless as it could get, the subject is like how a teenager would write short story, there is absolutely no surprise. There is no logic but only magic but the magic doesn’t work because its like seeing the age-old act for the umpteenth time. If the GVM movie was literal in narrative, this film is literal right from the title. The climax with the granny holding a cup of filter kaapi lokes like a more irritating version of Ashwagandha, Athi Madhuram mixed 3 roses tea ad.

Reunion

Seriously, what was even tried here. It has Andrea who’s hot as hell and wears great gym wears at home and even sings an awesome English song but that’s that. Of all, this looked like the most pointless film. Like a film of an old man who so wanted to prove that he is young. It was a reunion of sorts where a singer meets doctor who has crush on her. There are drugs, biryani and adidas thrown in. Poor Gurucharan C, apart from singing that Ooh la la la song, there isn’t one scene he looked comfortable. Especially going near Andrea, he had a constant fear like a high school student trying to talk to a pretty girl. The climax where he says that the poem is for her, is a point which the audience would have decoded even before the script was written.

Miracle

This would have been a film which most people had eagerly waited for. The film starts with trademark Karthik Subbaraj shots, music and pun. Wonder how Bobby Simha acts so well when it comes to his movies. He was effortlessly funny in this film too but the show stealer would definitely be his friend, Sharath Ravi, who was terrific with his comedy timing. But that’s that. It’s not a film by filmmaker Karthik Subbaraj but only by a short filmmaker Karthik Subbaraj. The film would qualify as one of the films made by contestants but not by a maestro. He’d have easily made this film during his Nalaya Iyakunar days, who knows maybe it’s one of the films he had in mind during those days but couldn’t make. So, he had made it this time with better production value. Except for the scene where the tyre rolls with “Oru kili uruguthu” background, there wasn’t anything funny. But it’s a troupe which has been beaten to death by now, so it fails even in that aspect.

So, my rating of the short film would be almost of the same order it appears on screen.

Reunion < Coffee, Anyone? < Miracle < Avarum Naanum – Avalum Naanum < Ilamai Idho Idho

A neat film for its style

‘C U Soon’ is a film, which looks to have been born because of the style. Given the restrictions outside, they wanted to make an inside film and adopted this style called ‘computer screen film’, to be more specific. In the line of ‘found footage film’, to be more generic. The only film, which I remember in the latter category, is ‘The Blair Witch Project’. No other film registers in mind because if you decode the style, there is not anything interesting to watch. The rabbit out of the hat moment is gone. Moreover, with such a technique it is tough to hold audience interest. ‘C U Soon’ was able to bypass that initial curiosity and make us get involved in the story. That by itself is a success.

The making reminded me of an episode in ‘Modern Family’ where everything happens in FaceTime. It was a superb episode. Even though it is not a series known for its making, I found that to be unique. ‘C U Soon’ employs the technique, with a little bit excuse but does it fairly well given the limitations. Like how it is important to forget the technique and get into the film, like appreciating a film by not mentioning about its style, for example, instead of being called a great anime, it should be called a great film. While watching an anime or any film for that matter, the technology must be forgotten and the film has to be remembered. Similarly, here ‘C U Soon’ makes us forget all the intricacies and gets us involved in it, in some time.

Jimmy (Roshan Mathew) and Anumol (Darshana Rajendran) are excellent as on screen virtual couples. They are in love and are ready to get married. Throughout the movie, I felt that Shane Nigam would have been a great choice for Jimmy’s role. Nevertheless, Darshana was perfect as Anumol, with a no makeup look and honest acting. She was prolific. But it’s Kevin (Fahadh Faasil) who steals the show. The role was tailor made for Fahadh Faasil, and given the nature of the role, he does it with ease. It feels like he has the super power in the entire film and everything acts in accordance with him. Other characters too were well etched.

What looks like a feel good film to start with, develops in a deep film about relationships and then goes on to become a thriller, effectively so. The film takes an issue and walks us through it. The whole thriller part is make believe, there could be flaws but I do not really mind them as long as it works and I do not really get them too. With a close up throughout Fahadh Faasil enjoys the limelight and acts his ass out, especially in the crying scenes, something which Kamal loves to perform.

There were a couple of scenes, which I loved for the impact. One being scene where Anumol was given a sluttier make up on compulsion due to the act she was about to perform. She breaks down in that scene. Generally in a scene like that, a lady wouldn’t be made to look beautiful but here we see her look good but her emotions are opposite, and even bends down with a little bit of cleavage visible which acts as a distraction. Question arises as to whether a girl will make a call to her mother in such situation. Point is that she had totally forgotten what state she is in. That is how desperate she is. A similar scene in ‘Queen’ where Lisa Haydon gets involved in a video call with Rani’s parents is funny but it’s easier to make for the same reason. Here it is tougher and riskier. Another scene is the one where Jimmy has a virtual drink with his younger cousin. It opens up nice where his cousin asks if she drinks. It was cute but ends when she is on high and stares at his crotch for an extra second. The crush/lust was shown rather quickly and was done well.

Overall, for the genre, it feels like a neat film, which holds our attention for a good one and a half hour and would be remembered for its making and the time of the release. Not sure whether it would have been more widely watched, if not for the COVID restriction. With it on, it does a fair job.

An almost perfect film about an almost impossible sets of people

It’s a film I was totally unaware of. But as I saw a blank looking Nawazuddin Siddiqui in the posters, I knew I was in safe hands. From the look of it, it looked like a serious movie which would be focused on plot where Nawazuddin would solve it, may be by being a police or CID and photograph would be a clue. But I was so wrong. Maybe I could make a film with my story. But this ‘photograph’ was more about drama than about plot. And unexpectedly Nawaz bhai plays second fiddle.

Nawazuddin always is really good at being in a film with less screen space and less importance but in the end comes out as someone with more impact. But here even he was outplayed by a brilliant Sanya Malhotra. All through the film, I was thinking, where I had seen here. Only on knowing her filmography, I found that it was Dangal. Even though she was the least important of characters there. I remember one specific scene when a desolate Amir Khan comes up to her second daughter and asks whether she’s at least interested in sports or something like that. She tells it affirmatively. It was such a lovely scene. She does exactly what’s needed.

Rafi (Nawazuddin Siddiqui) is a photographer near Gateway of India who gets introduced to us by a beautiful dialogue, which works when we don’t see his face but when we see his face, we get to know that it is said devoid of any emotions. Miloni (Sanya Malhotra) on the other hand is even bare than that when it comes to emotions. All we see is a little smile and very little dialogue from her. The maximum she smiles is when she’s there with Rafi’s grandmother, another charming character.

Rafi meets Miloni by chance and the plot gets the twist when he sends her photo as his fiancé to his grandmother. As her grandmother comes to see her, Rafi takes Miloni, who wanted to be an actor, along with him to meet her. Whether a girl like Miloni would be brave enough to go with someone like Rafi is a question mark but here it happens so we accept as such. Even though the idea is farfetched, how it’d have been if it had happened is the question. And they both play it really well.

There were a couple of excellent scenes, one, where they go in car and Rafi asks driver to shut his mouth. Miloni again as mum as ever and in another scene the tuition teacher takes Rafi to be an outsider who has come out to help Miloni. He doesn’t even think that he could be Miloni’s acquaintance. But there were a couple of bad scenes too where it was said out loud. Especially the scene in cab where the driver asks whether they both are from drama company. It was in face and rude.

Grandma (Farrukh Jaffar) comes as a great icebreaker. Reminded me very much of my own grandmother. The way she talks, behaves etc. How effectively she goes from her irritated mode to compassion mode is legendary. She was good in saying even the rudest of sentence in a nice way.