Sunday, February 03, 2013

Kadal review



Life is comprised of Highs and Lows, great experiences and experiences that tear you down to your core.  Yet, nothing should take you away from your path of righteousness.  There are unbelievable experiences in your life – you meet someone for the first time who believes in you and wants you to succeed, the first time you learn your job like riding a boat on the sea and catching fishes, the first time you fall in love and feel that your life has meaning, the first time someone accepts you unconditionally despite your flaws – all these experiences make your life worth it. That’s how I feel about Kadal. The highs of the movie justify the lows.
I am a Mani Rathnam fan – not just a regular fan - an ardent fan who watches each of his movies at least 3 or 4 times, despite it being hit or not. I memorize the dialogues in his movies and remember every frame. I know it’s crazy, I am not related to movies at all. But there is something about his movies which changes my perception about things. So before even going to the movie I told my husband I will like it. And for the first time when the movie ended I felt Mani could have done better. Somehow I felt he has tried to change his style so that he could get accepted.
In some scenes he shines, there is brilliance, passion, beauty which no other movie creator in Tamil could even try to emulate. It is sheer love of the story , of his characters and indeed he loves Thomas from the moment he shows him lying on top of his dead mother.  The progression of the character from a helpless child to a revengeful teenager is indeed amazing.  The scenes made me think about so many things – the way a prostitute is treated in a society, how anything related to such a woman is looked upon, how sometimes society makes a child a criminal. Yet, I couldn’t help but fall in love with Thomas as he cries for his mother,  and as he curiously tries to understand father Sam, as he learns for the first time to ride a boat and catch fish.
Gautham Karthik is introduced with Elay keechan. The movie still seemed good to me.  He sees Beatrice, is attracted to her, has a fight with his father who does not own him. Still good. The movie turns in another direction in the second half , yet it is still not so bad as some reviews turn out to be.  The good still makes the bad parts of the movie worth it.
These are the things I particulary enjoyed about the movie
1)      The scenes of Thomas till he becomes Gautham
2)      The scene where he learns to ride a boat. I saw so much excitement and joy in the boy’s eyes and I couldn’t help but admire the sea
3)      I did like the romance sequences with Bea
4)      I like the scene where they both deliver a baby
5)      I loved loved loved Moongil Thottam and the scene before it. It seems so beautiful to wipe away someone’s sins so easily.
I don’t even want to talk about the things I didn’t like. For brilliance to shine through, we need to digest a few boring things. Otherwise we would just be filled with mediocre movies.
Mani Rathnam and Rahman – you thought no one noticed the BGM is same as Raavan? Well, I did…..

Monday, January 28, 2013

Viswaroopam Review


Once in a while there comes a movie which makes me so passionate that I write a review of it. But very rarely comes a movie which makes my blood boil. I mean this movie is all about hatred – it is intended to bring out everything that Kamal Hassan hates.  It is ok to focus on your personal hatred – however some of the themes in this movie are highly consistent with his previous movies and highly distracting from the main story.
To start with – why should Kamal portray as a gay in this movie and dance to a Krishna song as a Brahmin? It seems like an attempt to mock the gay community. It doesn’t stop there. In all his movies he needs to mock or put down the Brahmin community. These are a bunch of people who are highly tolerant of everything and would not raise a voice against anything. In this movie, he uses words such as Papathy which is very derogatory of Brahmins, on top of it he also makes fun of them saying they are experts at eating meat – all unwanted to the story line.  Kamal could make a movie just to make fun of the things he hates and could call it Viswa comedy or something.  A lot of scenes in this movie is highly distracting, doesn’t move the story forward or reveal about the character. Even the Kathak song – what is the point of it?  
I would say it is pretty offensive to the Muslim community. Why would a Muslim Indian Army person change his name to a Hindu Brahmin and live in NYC? Why would he go to Afghanistan? Nothing makes sense.  As always there are dialogues which make fun of Hindu gods , he says “Which God?” . He also makes fun of the fact that Hindu gods have 4 hands and that we dunk our gods in the ocean - highly distracting, not relevant to the story. What is the point of the movie?
 It is just an opportunity for Kamal to vent out his anger and frustration. The amount of violence that too really unwanted speaks of the level of perversion in Kamal’s mind.
I would like to bring out these points to Kamal’s attention
1)      Please stop making fun of the Brahmin community
2)      Please stop making fun of Hindu Gods
3)      If a person is God fearing doesn’t mean they are bad people
4)      Please stop directing and stick to acting. Your thoughts are extremely perverse and not fit to be shared with the rest of the world.