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2016 Asif Ali Malayalam

Biju Menon & Asif Ali as a father-son duo (2016)

I finally got the film’s name right today. Anuraga Karikkin Vellam.

The film opens to a nuclear family, a working policeman father (Biju Menon), a housewife mother (Asha Sharath), an older son looking for a job after his course in architecture (Asif Ali) & a school going daughter. The rest of the cast are friends/colleagues of this central family. However, the strain in their relationship stands out, be it between the husband-wife, father-son and mother-son.

Eli (Rajisha Vijayan) is Abhi (Ali’s) girlfriend from college, but their relation too is filled with irritations, and not much love. So they break up, however she has a way to return to Abhi’s life. Her intervention brings in the much needed ice breaker and spark back into his family. That’s in short the story of the film, and the transformation from strain to familial ..

Soubin, Sreenath Bhasi, Irshad & Sudhir Karamana support this cast.

Categories
2020 Malayalam

Anjaam Pathira (2020) sets out well but …

Anjaam Pathira sets out as an edge of the seat first half. The background score by Sushin Shyam, the slick editing and the play of lights create the desired shock to the characters, and the audience before they break for the interval. But it loses this quality somewhere in the middle of the second to create a predicatable but fitting ending.

The film begins and ends with Kunjachacko Boban, the consulting criminologist on the case. His first real case, therefore he seems to be the most invested in it, his intuitions take the story forward, this is also one of the flaws in the script. His character does not organically grow to fill the plot like the doctor he played in Virus. Here, he happened to be, and became like a coincidence.

But director Mithun Manuel Thomas has chosen him to shoulder the anticipation of the crimes to be. Even then, his deductions aren’t mindblowing breaks. They aren’t exactly flattering to the round the clock working police force. Therefore, a weak script. A character and actor to look out for, Unnimaya Prasad as the lead investigator in a full length role makes a mark. Her dubbing for this character is also excellent.

That said, in this age when the audience begins to participate in the making of a story streaming in front of us, it becomes tricky to make a film like anjaam pathira. We are unconsciously making our own conclusions and moving to the next scene in our heads, it may match, it may run parallel to the plot until we find a point of re-entry into the plot to continue our hypothesis. But nothing will come close to the motive of these murders until the big reveal here. So much so that when the sketch of the killer is shown to the audience we have no idea who this person is, or how they are related to the crime as this is their first appearance on screen..

the premise of the backstory is relevant to our times, it is a story to be told, to be made aware of, one we should not ignore no matter what.

Categories
2020 Malayalam

Trance (2020) : an out & out Fahadh Faasil film

Trance is about of Viju Prasad (Fahadh Faasil). He is a troubled man, but a man with big dreams. At the beginning of the film, he conducts workshops outside his working hours at a local restaurant, for people who need some kind of motivation in their lives to move on, the irony being he needs it more.

Soon we are introduced to his younger brother Kunjan (Sreenath Bhasi) a troubled guy again, on medication to keep his depression in check. The brothers try to overcome the dents their mother’s suicide has created in their lives, the elder looking out for the younger, until the latter decides to go on a long journey like their mother.

A dejected Viju who is also deeply affected by his circumstances, tries to keep himself motivated by the speel he gives his clients to get through the day, everyday. He is the little boy who was never consoled, never cried, had to be grow up soon for the sake of looking after his younger brother. We see the chinks in our protagonist, and wait for the moment he may break. His dreams of making it big with his workshops is one such hope he feeds himself. As an audience we know that would require a miracle seeing his current clientele!

The first half of Trance shows Viju’s that miracle in action. He is hired by top brass Solomon Davis (Gautam Vasudev Menon) and Isaac Thomas (Chemban Jose) on the recommendation of Kavitha (Aswathi Menon), a film casting agent in Mumbai to mint money using people’s addiction and recourse to religion, miracle workers and godmen & women. He is trained by Avarachan (Dileesh Pothan) to be renamed as Pastor Joshua Carlton, the face of their new venture. They bank on his training, charisma, the drugs to keep him hyperactive and an atmosphere their backend team creates to gain followers and a worldwide reach. And they do.

Viju’s world changes from the terraces and kaccha lanes of a quiet seaside town of Kanyakumari to the glitz, glamour, a world of showmanship & limelight of Joshua Carlton, JC for short speaking to auditoriums jam packed with ‘followers’ who line up to listen to him. Gradually, he begins to believe in the lies he creates through his performance like he used to feed himself his motivational speeches forgetting he is only a member of a well planned scheme to fool people. The remaining half of Trance reveals the back stories, issues of mental health, drug abuse, and the underbelly of the making of this image, and its aftermath. It is slower than the first, but a needed explanation to the crisp first half that kept us on a rush.

I half expected somebody in the audience to shout Hallelujah mersmerised by Fahad’s act, that is how real this entire project is, like the cricket match is in Lagaan. This Anwar Rasheed team of Vincent Vadakkan, Sushin Shyam, Jackson Vijayan, Amal Neerad, Rasool Pookutty, Praveen Prabhakar, Ajayan Challissery and the actors have delivered a delicious film about a current problem we are facing that takes advantage of the gullibility of people for their business gains.

The film will immediately strike a cord with anybody who is fed up with the industry of gods, human gods, and any kind of stubborn belief in isms, products, fashion and people who are so mersmerised by the idea advertised that they listen to no reason. They have used Christianity as a token idea to make people aware of a darker side to these popular influential people and products about blindly following any such. But it is bound to get brickbacks from the people who are living this life, we need to see if the audience keeps coming to the theatre after the first over booked weekend.

With the kind of ending Trance signed off with, it brings in a kind of closure to the story of Viju Prasad making it a bildungsroman. This gives us Fahadh Faasil at his best. But I would have preferred the film packing up when JC faded away into smoke the last time he was on stage, making it open ended for the sake of a mystery, much like the other inconclusive tidbits in the film that will keep us wondering if they were all an act or for real? Or done in a state of trance 🙃

The film also stars Nazriya Nazim, Arjun Ashokan, Soubin Shahir, Vinayakan, Jins Joseph, Srinda and Joju George.

Categories
2014 2019 English Malayalam Nivin Pauly

Moothon (2019) & Liar’s Dice (2014)

The institution of the family seems to be important to writer-director Geetu Mohandas as relations within it form the crux of her two film stories. Take Liar’s Dice for instance. Kamala who didn’t hear from her husband for 5 months after he had left for a job at a construction site in the city, decides to go looking for him. From the moment we spot her on screen, we see her punching his number into her cell phone continuously even after it gives back a switched off message. Therefore, she decides to walk with her 3-4 year old daughter, on her instance her pet goat, one day to the nearest town.

Mulla in Moothon has a similar urgency to meet the big brother rumoured to have left their island years ago for Mumbai. The bullying at school and the streets gives this desire more momentum. One night, he takes his uncle’s fishing boat and sets sail for the mainland with a phone number in hand. Both Kamala and Munna are following a wild hope in their heart when they set out on a journey to a destination they have only heard about from others.

Their lives during this journey, the people they meet form the crux of the stories!

Categories
2019 Arun Kumar Aravind Asif Ali Malayalam

Underworld (2019) 🤨😬

Underworld: can skip the theatre show to watch on Amazon Prime, their streaming partner.

Google Images

When a small town ambitious toughie Stalin John (Asif Ali) is sent to prison, his life takes an unprecedented turn by leaping into a different level of a thug life.

Arun Kumar Arvind’s Underworld centres on the rise & life of Stalin alongside the 3 other characters, Mujeeb (Farhaan Faasil), Solomon (Lal Jr) & Padmanabhan Nair (Mukesh) introduced in the teaser & trailer.

The quartet, and the rest of the cast who share complicated relationships with each other may not be heroes with pristine character certificates, nevertheless, within the scope of their shady lives, Stalin and Mujeeb uphold values of friendship, Solomon’s man friday (Nishant Sagar) is loyal towards his heartless master, and Muthumani is Perry Mason-esque in her attitude towards her client, Stalin. They are surrounded by devoted family members, and at least a friend, but the final battle seems to be set between Stalin and Solomon as it is their lives & families who have more screen time in comparison to those of Nair & Mujeeb.

The take away from the film could be an enriched vocabulary to describe a range of ruthlessness in people engaged in felony; synonyms of goon & gangster, as they aren’t the same, to describe & differentiate Stalin, Mujeeb and Solomon for the jobs they do, attitudes they carry, influences they have, & milieu they live in.

However, the film heavily & solely relies on its background score by Yakzan Gary Pereira & Neha Nair to keep the thriller and thug ambience alive in a weak script with cliched scenes, mass punch lines, & slow motion! It could defintiely have been shorter, the second half crisper, the story less predictable with more depth!

Lal Jr looked, behaved & sounded as menacingly vile as his father did in his debut in Kaliyattam (1997). Mukesh played the part of the corrupt septuagenarian politician with elan. Farhaan Faasil comes across as a cute goon, who may have to write his own makeover story like his brother did in the years to come 🤞. Samyuktha Menon, Amalda Liz & Ketki Narayan play there and not there roles, as this isn’t their story to tell. Nevertheless, Muthumani as the advocate, and Sreelakshmy as Stalin’s mother, make an impact with the little they have to do in this script. So does Srikanth Murali as Potty, Padmanaban’s secret keeper, and Meghanathan, Solomon’s confidante in the police force. The comic relief is brought about by the surprise cameo of the trio Arjun Ashokan, Balu Varghese and Ganapathy, in that order 😉 The books used as props need a mention.

As this tedious long film ends, the audience may not empathise with the director, the gangster story by Shibin Francis, the songs that came and went or the cast. They may remember a few moments of male bonding between Mujeeb & Stalin, and ponder over the evolution of Asif Ali as an actor in the ten years he has been in this industry since Shyamaprasad’s Ritu (2009).

Categories
2019 Malayalam Mohanlal Prithviraj

Lucifer! Empuraan

Wanting to watch Lucifer again, a fourth and a fifth time when streamed on a TV channel, after I had watched it in the theater on day 2 of its release, and later on streaming platforms says, I like the film. Not in its entirety but in parts.

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That scene when Priya Ramdas (Manju Warrier) confronts her current husband Bobby (Vivek Oberoi) after her daughter Jhanvi (Sanya Eyyappan) confessed to her about the misdeeds of her step father, that he has been initiating her into drugs, and asking for sexual favours she hasn’t given into. Priya on her part is shocked. Initially she thinks Jhanvi is lying to cover up her addiction, but the daughter and mother find a middle ground, and the floodgates of woes opened. In the next scene, we see a Priya teeming with rage waiting in her chair rocking, to lash out at Bobby.

But, her anger fizzles out into stunned disbelief when Bobby accepts, then warns, and later threatens her. It is one of those chill down our spines kind of reply. It washed away all her years of trust in him.

In the beginning of the film, she is seen relieved that her teenage difficult daughter talked to him even when she wasn’t on talking terms with her. At the hospital, after Jhanvi opens up to her about her life inside the house, Priya still hopes that her daughter is making up stories about her stepfather, but the reply ends all of it. At the end of it, she sees Booby for the villain he is, the reasons why he had married her, and as the long time planner who murdered her first husband and father in the name of power. 

Lucifer as a narrative from the beginning is moving towards a final standoff between an arrogant Bobby who thinks the state is at his feet after the death of his Chief Minister father-in-law, and Stephan (Mohanlal) who he thinks is a mere politician from a constituency he can pacify, smear and put behind bars.

The rest of the film lines up the reasons for Stephan to kill Bobby without an inkling of guilt. As the credits roll, the narrative settles comfortably into the dynastic leadership, with the elder brother keeping a watch over his younger siblings, the sister turning advisor to her younger brother, the newly appointed chief minister.

We can’t blame Bobby for thinking it was his idea to bring his brother-in-law, Jatin Ramdas (Tovino Thomas) into this political milieu as a puppet to dance according to his tunes. He had to be a little more aware, listen to the gossips and conspiracies put forth on social platforms by the character played by Indrajith. He would have known. To the audience, there was always a bigger role for Lal in the film other than the politician he was playing throughout. The ending may not have come as a surprise to any especially if they had taken the prologue seriously.

The film on its parts throws up the question as to who is the bigger and lesser evil, it up to the audience to discern. 

Enough has been written about the film since it was conceived, made and released. You can except more moments like these if I happen to watch it again.

Categories
2019 Malayalam Mohanlal

Can give Ittimani a skip! (2019)

Mohanlal has been looking after older women in his films for a while now.

Ittimani (ooops spoilers ahead) is no different. If in Drama he helps to fulfill a dead woman’s last wish in the choice of her site of burial, here he goes a step further to marry an older woman, the widow who lives next door, his mother’s closest friend, his classmates’ mother to teach her children basic lessons in how to look after aging parents.

I can understand the intention of the film makers in choosing such a pertinent subject matter, and use their film to create an awareness about it to the public. However, the story does not pull the audience to emotionally be involved in it. By the time or rather if the audience has patience to sit through until that revealing climax) the script and direction has already played spoilsport in driving them away or lulling them into boredom with stupid jokes in the name of the slapstick.

Drama, last year, Baba Kalyani a few years ago, Snehaveedu, at a time of Sheela’s second coming, when she wanted to work with Lal are all stories about a younger (?) male protagonist in combination with an older mother figure whom he helps in a crisis, as a son, police officer, family friend or/and as part of his job. This series of being helping hand is becoming a little more than tiring especially when Mohanlal the superactor alone cannot pull audiences to watch his film anywhere.

Lucifer was mass film with thorough script and excellent direction. It is difficult to believe he ia the same actor who chose to be Lucifer, earlier this year, & the Ihikara Pakki cameo that overshadowed Nivin Pauly’s titular Kayalamkulam Kochunni.

About Ittimani, watch at your own risk, level.of patience, state of mind, levels of stress

Categories
Hindi Malayalam

3 Blind Men

I happened to watch oppam (a 2016 malayalam film) and kaabil (a 2017 hindi film) one after the other in a span of a few days. And believe me, watching two films with two enthusiastic blind men in the lead did nothing to my psyche or sympathy for anybody or the film. But it made me go find Yodha (an older 1992 Malayalam film) on you tube and watch it all over again for its treatment of the same handicap.

I should neither be judgemental nor be critical about a film. But what irked me most about both the newer films were how they glorified the blindness aspect of their lead characters from the start when these characters are shown to be self reliant and do not think of their blindness as a handicap to live by.

Therefore I go back to Yodha, where nothing of the blindness is highlighted in extravagant proportion to make the star, that is Mohanlal. It could be because the star becomes blind mid way through the film when the plot of the film has entered a crisis. Ashokan, the character played by Mohanlal, finds it as a handicap, but tries to adjust to his blindness without much fuss, learns to horne his other senses and use them to the hilt. He did gave a persistent teacher & mission to get him into the groove of things. The rest as Coleridge has said we need to suspend and just believe.

When a Malayalee today sits to watch Oppam, they may see a Mohanlal who has already been trained to live with his blindness, a training he was given in Yodha back in the 90s. In that way, the film is a commemoration of sorts. However, nothing explains how and where the Hrithik Roshan of Kaabil receives his training from

Oppam (2016) Malayalam | dir: Priyadarshan | Mohanlal, Nedumudi Venu

Kaabil (2017) Hindi | dir: Sanjay Gupta| Hrithik Roshan, Ronit Roy

Yodha (1992) Malayalam | dir: Sangeeth Sivan | Mohanlal, Madhu, Siddhartha, Jagathy

Categories
2019 Kalabhavan Shajoan Malayalam Uncategorized

Brother’s Day: Kalabhavan Shajoan’s directorial debut (2019 – Onam)

True to its name, the film begins with the story of a 10 year old boy expecting a baby sister from his nearly fully pregnant mother in flashback colours – his mother’s pet, the village’s darling, friends’ hero, but his drunk Tamilian stepfather’s hate. The build up to this smooth but fractured childhood in the title song is disrupted by the death of the mother at child birth. The helplessness of a boy that young, losing the only loving relative he had to an unexpcted death is conveyed effectively. As an audience we feel sad for his plight & future with a man who has no attachment towards him whatsoever. But the new born baby girl changes all of it turning him into her caregiver under these harsh circumstances. The story smells of more tragedy such as when the sister grows older into a tweenager, her father offers her to his friend. The brother who arrives in the nick of time saves her by slaughtering the two men. But the trauma of the incident seems to have set into the little girl’s mind just as the blood speckled on her petticoat had dried & strained the cloth.

In the present, Prithviraj (Ronny) introduced in a flamboyant 1980s hero style is interrupted by the entry of his sidekick (Dharmajan) to tell us they work for Joy caterers, and are about to serve lunch at a wedding. Kottayam Naseer who is the Joy of Joy Caterers, Joy Tours & Travels etc etc etc .. with a trying to be happy but still can’t conceal the sadness sub-story of a childless couple is a small scale business man in Cochin. At the wedding reception, a brash and loud Madonna Sebastian along with her girlfriends get into trouble with Ronny for cutting the buffet queues to heap their plates with food. But she turns out to be the daughter of the groom and not a student of the college nearby trying sneak in a free lunch as they assumed her to be. As the flashback and the present go their parallel ways in the plot so far, Joy enters again to ask Ronny a favour, this time to pick up one of his regular guests from the bus hub and drop him at a pre-booked hotel accomodation. However, things go haywire for Joy & Ronny as the man Chandy (Kuttan), Ronny picks up turns out to be the wrong guy. He soon finds himself in an accident after which he tells Ronny’s name as his local guardian. If you found this tedious, the first half of the film is like a game with more known actors from the industry being introduced one after the other without much context. Prasanna of the Comfort Ad fame is also introduced but by the looks, sounds & bgm he can be immediately registered as the villain. But the film offers no curiosity brownie points to find out where he intersects with the lives of our Joy boys. This is where he film fails in script & direction, it fails to inject that adrenaline edge of the seat curiosity associated with a vengeance or a thriller.

However, the film isn’t as bad as its was reviewed at the time of its release during Onam this last month. But it is not the interesting kind either. When a film comes with a title like brother’s day, it is indicative of the centrality of the the character of the brother in it. Nevertheless, the plot falls flat as the suspense is centred on the play on the audience’s mind as to who among these characters form the intial brother-sister pair from the flashback..Nadir Shah’s debut felt like a one hour tv skit stretched longer into a film with an interesting climax. We will have to wait for Shajoan to write more scripts & direct more films to see him carve his niche as a film maker like he did for his acting career.

Watchable, one time is too much, but with adequate breaks if you want to, that is. Go with zero expectations.

Categories
2019 Malayalam

Pranaya Meenukalude Kadal (2019)

Skip / watch at your own risk. Trailer

The eco-friendly cloth posters show Vinayakan coming out of the waters with a spear giving us hope of a meaty titular role, depth in character etc, etc, one can have so many expectations from a poster of a Kamal film featuring Vinayakan!! The film introduces him as Poseidon/Aquaman (I’m not even being sarcastic here) with a born in the sea origin story, running on the white sands of the ocean bed lying in wait for that biiiiiig shark. In Malayalam film nostalgia, he is the Pullimurugan of this Kavaratti seashore. But … Even Dileesh Pothan’s presence does nothing to elevate this film to “let’s watch it for the scenery in Lakshadweep.”

The film is a roll of cliches, trying to fit into the new generation age with an 80/90s love story of a boy meets girl, with a problematic past. All of the main leads, the love birds (the pranayana meenukal, it should be them, I guess) included have their individual introductions. But, intros alone do not make a plot interesting! The scriptwriter & director in Kamal needs to understand stalking a person with or without a mobile phone, taking their pictures and videos in reel & real is an offence.

Dear Censor Board, I wonder if you were sleeping while you passed this film with such inept content. Where were the warning flash messages saying stalking is a social offence! Your commitment to society especially in an age where the WCC has been organized in the Malayalam film industry to empower, educate, enrich women in/inside cinema is questionable!

I didn’t for a moment find it cute that the island girl falls heads over heels in love with the stalker boy from the mainland Calicut soon after the lip lock under duress underwater. So …

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