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Sarvam – Tamil Movie Review: இழப்பின் வலி . .

Loss. Bereavement. Vengeance. This is what ‘Sarvam’ is, in a nutshell. Went to see Sarvam at Satyam Cinemas Saturday morning. It was a different experience, as we woke up at 7:15 and were rushing to the Theatre. Chennai was cool as a result of the Friday night’s heavy rain. The theatre was filled with a good crowd. The movie started exactly on time, at 8:30.

Before the movie began, we see the disclaimer which reads:  ‘All the incidents in this film are fictitious……. Until they happen to you’. We see an upanishad quote about death. The film begins with Chakravarthi shouting in anguish inside a dark forest.

The film cuts to Arya, and the introduction song. We learn that Karthick (Arya) is an architect. He meets Sandhya (Trisha) in a go-carting race, and falls in love as soon as he sees her. Sandhya is a doctor, and so Karthick goes to her hospital and tries to woo her. Sandhya hates Karthick as she thinks he is not serious about life. Gradually, she falls for him, and the two happily enjoy life.

We also see Eashwar, a man who has lost his wife  and son in a road accident. Eashwar thinks that it was Naushad – the man who accidentally hit Eashwar’s wife (Anu Hassan in a cameo) and son with his car – who is  solely  responsible for their death, and he repeatedly stalks Naushad and threatens him that he doesn’t understand the loss Eashwar has undergone and he will only understand it if his own son dies. Naushad has a little boy Iman, and Naushad finally hides in Munnar, fearing Eashwar.

It is at this point that the story takes a serious turn. Sandhya dies in a brutal accident, and Karthick is devastated. Sandhya’s father tells Karthick that Sandhya’s heart has been transplanted and it’s Naushad’s son who  is living with her heart. Karthick becomes emotional and goes on a trip to find out Naushad. By following Karthick, Eashwar too arrives at Munnar. What happens at Munnar forms the rest of the story. Was Eashwar successful in his mission to kill Naushad’s son? Was Karthick able to overcome his grief? See the movie.

Sarvam is directed by Vishnu Vardhan. Now, all his previous movies were stylishly made (Arindum Ariyamalum, Pattiyal, Billa) and this one too, is brimming with youthfulness right from the beginning till the intermission. The first half is romantic and is fun to watch, especially Arya’s repeated attempts to woo Trisha.

The second half is entirely different from the first half and the story takes us through the beautiful locations in Munnar. The climax is dragging, and I found it uninteresting. Except the final 30 minutes, this film is worthy to watch.

The story has been woven around the central theme of loss. The pain of loss. We see Eashwar gradually getting afflicted with the psychotic obsession of killing Naushad’s son, as he thinks he lost his wife and son because of Naushad. Naushad too, talks in a don’t-care manner when Eashwar comes to Naushad’s house for the first time. All this adds up and Eashwar decides to kill Naushad’s son to make him understand the pain of losing the dearest ones. On the other hand, Karthick too suffers the pain of loss when he loses Sandhya in the accident. But, Karthick’s mindset is to prevent others from experiencing such a kind of pain, and that’s what he exactly says to Eashwar when they both meet up in Munnar. This difference in mindsets is what makes the film worthwhile to watch.

The camera is good, especially in the scenes filmed in Munnar. Nirav Shah has done a neat work. The music too is okay. While seeing the beautifully filmed songs, I was not able to stop thinking about Vishnu Vardhan using Rahman in this film. It would have been absolutely brilliant if Rahman had scored the music, as that would have been a perfect match with the camera work. Yuvan was also good with the songs but somehow I felt Rahman would have been the better choice.

Arya has done a cool job. Although he is very predictable in some scenes, he is okay. Trisha is cute. After a long time, she has been shown in a beautiful way, and is attractive. Chakravarthi is the antagonist, and he looks like a younger Kamal Hassan in some scenes. He has done a neat job of the psychotic villain. The little boy who has acted as Iman, Naushad’s son is a good actor, it seems. All his scenes with Arya are thoroughly enjoyable.

And, I dunno why throughout the movie, the characters keep praising Ilayaraja. That too, in comparison with Rahman. I can understand that this movie was made during Rahman’s Oscar glory and may be that’s the reason the film makers decided to justify Ilayaraja against Rahman and through Arya’s character, they say that although Rahman is great, Ilayaraja is the greatest! I didn’t like this comparison game which went on almost throughout the movie.

Overall, the film is worthy to watch, but beware about the final thirty minutes, which makes us to question about the logical gaps (holes!!) in the script.

Sarvam – இழப்பின் வலி .

Written by Scorp.

Scorp alias Rajesh Giriraajan is a blogger with a flair for movies, music and comics from different parts of the world. He has reviewed several movies in his world movie series. You can read more of Scorp’s writing in his blog.

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Naan Kadavul – Tamil Movie Review

Written by Ronin

I went to watch Naan Kadavul with high expectations. The expectations were unavoidable, since it has taken three years to make the movie. It burned through the cash of three producers including Zee TV. And since Director Bala has earned a name for himself with his earlier offbeat movies.

Arya in Naan Kadavul

Arya in Naan Kadavul

The movie started with a Doordarshan made documentary movie feel on Kasi, at the banks of the river Ganges. The movie covered the devotee ocean in Kasi, pyres for the dead and the Aghori Sadhus (Sadhus who claim they are god). None of the shots were spectacular, than the Aghori pictures seen years ago in Frontline or India Today, covering the secret sect of Sadhus. There were no images of the sadhus eating dead corpses or floating corpses.

The director’s influence watching too many 80s and 90s movies is  obvious. The unhealthy father, crying mother and sad looking sister completed the picture. When he wanted to build a character or convey something quickly, a song was introduced with images running in the background. The fact the songs were in Sanskrit, makes them non-understandable. Not sure, how long we are going to cover our helplessness in conveying characters through screen play! And in one of the early songs, I took my bathroom break.

I came back. The hero Arya looks like a Model although he is a Agori Sadhu. This was in tune with Vikram with streaked hair in Pithamagan. He speaks in a “Dark Knight’s” voice most of the movie. The background music was very garish in the early part of the movie . I felt the drums, specifically the Hi-hat(the one that looks like a silver plate on the drum set) was abused, whenever a suspense or shock track was played(reminding 80s again). If the director wants to make an international mark, he is better off choosing a different music director in his next movie..

This is when the movie leaves the world of Kasi, the sadhu’s parents and his characterization. Director moves into the uncaptured world of deformed beggars, their kidnappers and handlers in a small temple-town. It goes deeper into their dingy shelter in an unfinished temple. And this is where the humor in the movie starts. As the deformed are kidnapped and forced to beg and collect money for their handlers, they go about their life with a rare humor. The humor is very rustic, natural and mind-blowing. The characters parody and tease politics, god, cops, cinema and their own life. The director is a genius and his keen observation and reproduction of life in village is impeccable..The shock, revulsion, despair and sympathy you undergo as you watch the characters are unavoidable. The success of the movie lies in making you appreciate the humor and their life beyond this emotions.

The movie gets a life of its own at this point and makes us forget our surrounding after this point. The movie is stolen by each and every one of the beggar actors here. The heroine of the movie completely steals the show from hero, Arya. She most probably might win national award for her role. The movie deals with how the Agori hero and the blind beggar girl deal with sudden developments in their life. The crisp and few dialogues are appreciated. Few characters like the beggar trader from Kerala and beggar handler are built with extraordinary detail (for ex, they are shown as religious).

I have to mention that the movie ends with a sad note with the girl meeting death rather than deal with her life. It is unfortunate that a sadhu with hints of supernatural powers (he can recognize evil men), recommending death as a solution to problems (he could have taken her to Kasi, when he returns). But for some reason, the end fits the story well. May be unintentionally to indicate that he is not god himself..

It is not a totally non-commercial film. In many ways, it is a super-hero film with a Batman kind of hero, who is nonchalant, rude, violent, loner and reclusive. He just calls himself god, instead of Batman.

I hear complains about lack of screenplay or story line in the movie. Do we need childhood lovers or mafia or happy marriage(not a reference to Slumdog Millionaire) in every movie? There have been movies on one day incidents, that have won Oscars.

It is Bala’s misfortune that he wont be able to ply his art as well in Hindi/English as in tamil movies, as his strength is keen reproduction of rural tamil life. But it is tamil-film fans blessing, that he is tied to tamil movies. The director takes tamil movies to the next level, again.

ps: If Shekhar Kapur is reading this, he should definitely checkout this movie.

Other Good Reviews in Tamil:

http://www.athishaonline.com/2009/02/blog-post_07.html

http://www.luckylookonline.com/2009/02/blog-post_06.html

http://rprajanayahem.blogspot.com/2009/02/blog-post_08.html

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