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Jailer (I) (2023)
5/10
Bit of a disappointment, yet a total treat for fans
11 August 2023
Just how much fan service will you include in a movie, team? The objective is to tell a story and entertain, not entertain with fillers. The main plot idea sounds like a 80s Jackie Chan film, which is ok as some Rajini scenes of that time were a tribute to such movies..

Still, other than the comedy in the first half, I do not understand what is attractive about the film. The little kid and family bonding moments were particularly sweet.. Yet, the second half was full of undesirable directions. For the sake of making this a pan-India film, you have a lot of masala thrown around. Yet, we do not enjoy these as well-connected to the film's setting.

At least, all the fans would scream their lungs out at some of the places in the film. In particular, the second half's start has a treat for the fans. The problem was the team did not put a stop to referencing innumerable old Rajini films. Are we here to watch Jailer or scenes of old Rajini films? At least, this does not have concepts that are completely foreign to India like in "Vikram", that sold it shamelessly by naming the villain after Pablo Escobar and aped the West in the name of "class" entertainment. Jailer has no scarcity of "mass" elements and we cannot love it enough. Yet, do not bring young kids or haters with you.
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Maaveeran (2023)
1/10
Cringeworthy copy of many things. Including Rajini hairstyle and movie title
23 July 2023
Opening comic strip of a giant man - copied from "Attack on the titans" (Shingeki no Kyoujin), along with the action in the comic. Rajinikanth's iconic pole fight before home in Baasha is also copied, only difference is Manikkam asked his sister to go in and here, the people are asked not to go in(!)

I do not know what to say... Korean films "Tower", "The Exit" and "Agent Jun" were copied a lot in the second half, particularly in the climax. Throughout, "Agent Jun" also seems to have influenced a lot. The one star is for the comedy with Yogi Babu who pulls some serious faces here. (Some YouTubers are also funny for a few minutes)

The heroine is more like a waste baggage character, although the actress tries to act sometimes and fails. The entire sister's problem arc is unresolved, which is deeply disappointing and the film just keeps following random tracks behind a thin concept. This is not a super hero film, as no explanations or super powers exist. Maybe the message is to kill off the dreams of anyone who tries to make anime in India.

The film is not worth the watch time and the action is awful... Particularly in the climax. All scenes are predictable and characters are one-dimensional. I do not understand why "Mandela" director made such a disaster. Maybe to pamper the actor's fans with a delusion that this is "mass". The one scene where the princess is sketched as the heroine is an utter flop, as the heroine looks worse than the previous sketch. Moreover, such "Kanni theevu" styles of sketches were dead a long time ago and at least the opening animation could have been new age for this budget. Where did the 85 crores go?!
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Maamannan (2023)
10/10
Another moving, but masala masterpiece. Fahadh Faasil acted better than Kamal Haasan of Thevar Magan
17 July 2023
Software firm's VP, "What's your caste?", to his program manager. After two mins, "It is not saying... Maybe a Sakkili (sic)", at Bangalore in this decade.

AR Rahman, "Not in the city, but especially whenever I go to the countryside... the things I hear.. the things we read about, that happen even today. These motivated me."

Kamal Haasan, "I feel for this, this is my politics too and not just a particular section of the society's. I hold this up, everyone needs to take this up as our politics."

Fahhad Fasil, "I am raring to act in a Mari Selvaraj film"

Vadivelu, "Avuu"

Udayanidhi, "This is my final film!"

Normally, I never begin my reviews with such comments, yet I feel this is the background necessary for appreciating the film in full depth. Mari Selvaraj had repeatedly told that Thevar Magan had impacted and tormented him heavily when he was a kid. Many online abuse him as be a jealous imbecile who cannot direct epics such as this. Yet, this is his vision for the (Thevar Magan) Vadivelu character's story from the point of view of his son, Athiveeran (Udayanidhi Stalin). Vadivelu's first serious role is a huge success, although his acting prowess comes as no surprise for the Tamil audience, who had been seeing him enact an increasingly complex set of emotions in his comedy scenes for decades. The critical reception and box office success of the film tells the success on paper of this film. Yet, the opposing waves of social media outbursts is the real success.

This is not expressed in a way to comment negatively on any community. However, when we continue to see many casteist incidents every day, the majority of negative reviews only talk about the mention of caste in the film and that this projects casteism back into reality when it does not exists nowadays. Will this poison today's youth as these boomer uncles hold? As much as taking a vaccine would kill you, before Covid gets you for good. "They always scream that they were attacked and bore us". Well, the film is a masala success too, with many commercial elements and is hardly boring.. A lot of negative comments that personally attack the director and his fellow community level, show the veiled casteism which pollute the society even today. Such voices are behind pushing "undeserving" students to suicides and at the same time gang up to steal with violence, the fish produce allocated to other communities.

As much as a pandemic is a global concern, casteist driven deaths and suicides are the society's concern. When ninety five percent of all marriages in Tamilnadu are within the same caste, how does just saying noone cares about caste make sense? The concern over the violence in the film hides the fact that many heinous crimes are committed even today, where Dalit lives are stolen at whim and some go as far as smearing human faeces on a stick to shove down some unfortunate Dalit's throats. Some crimes are so violent that one does not discuss online, such as the Dalit women who got gangraped by a 'first' community and beheaded to be penetrated again with a stick while another was erecting her head like a medieval trophy. These happened within the past few years and how can the society be polluted further with films which speak against this? If anything, having Stalwarts support this film only says such crimes will not go unpunished, which is not the message other common "caste pride" films communicate. Such casteist films which are a dozen a year, propagate the idea that certain castes have the authority to kill for "good" purposes. Casteist stereotypes are to be broken and Kamal Haasan commends this film as he accepts such views.

When you see this as a film, you can observe this film's script was not finished before the hero joined and several sacrifices were done for him. Many elements were added randomly, with a disjoint romance section, and several outbursts without background, which is so uncharacteristic of Mari Selvaraj's films. However, this is the first film where Udhayanidhi had opened his scenes, with his skin deep in the character. Coming from a deeply troubled childhood, he conveys his constant dejectedness at the society and even his loved ones, by his deep set face. He does not even talk with his dad, yet stays home and runs a martial arts dojo where he had grown up. The action scenes are fire and look methodical, accordingly. The film's problems with a jagged storyline get compensated by strong performances of all actors.. Karnan hid some aspects like poisoning of wells and cops abducting lower caste women, even pregnant ones to the police station for gang-rapes and torture, sometimes aborting the foetus. Similarly, electoral violence is hidden here, in form of animal fights. In reality, cases like Melavalavu had murders of lower castes who won elections. As a rebuttal to Thevar Magan, this film poses the Fahad Fahsil character as Kamal Haasan's and his brother's character as Nassar's. When Thevar Magan Kamal just says, "I have a lion inside me sleeping too. Don't wake him Maya!", this was a casteist trope that all "fighter caste" have a fighting genetics. However, this is laughable as Kamal's character did not have any fight training in the film. Here, Fahad's character saying, "Dumb guy.. All problems are because of you" to his brother is a similarly intense line.

Indians have to hold their head down in shame as many people are constantly displeased by such violent films, while supporting meaningless violence in 'commercial'/'soil-fragrant' films. Yet, the film does not propose non-violence as a solution like in Thevar Magan. This has both the Buddha's picture and a Sikh guru's picture, showing that peace is a good starting point, yet violence will follow if a Jalianwalahbagh incident happens to peaceful people. If someone does not want to watch films of a certain genre, many are welcome to do so. Yet, while not even watching such films, hundreds leave the worst review online, in an attempt to save "caste" honour and thousands resort to social media abuses, even lying that animals are tortured in the film (all such scenes were made with graphics). The film has succeeded in highlighting this -- that even in a technologically advanced world, people have not forgotten the roots of casteism that so many cling to religiously (in a literal sense too with religious doctrines). In an India where caste is the sole basis of judging 'merit' and giving jobs/projects/promotions many times everywhere from the modern institutions to IT firms, many lie online that caste is dead in today's society. What is dead is many people's conscience today and this film asks several questions about this. Watch this with an open mind if you have one, or else just accept the reality that you will never let go of casteism and reservations exist to protect the vulnerable.
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2/10
I know the IG very well, but he does not know me.
15 July 2023
At least, I understood the origin of this line from Vivek. Vivek acted in this film when he was young, and a similar line is said by his co-star Laksmi in the film.

I saw this film when YouTube went to this on Autoplay, as I was watching scenes from another film in sequence. As I was cleaning my room, I saw this running in the background. Unfortunately, this was a bitter experience and I am thankful they stopped making such films.

A Lakhsmi character playing a righteous petitioner cum spinster? Check. Visu doing random manipulation in name of saving family values? Check. Completely foolish scenes in the name of twists? Check. Throw such scripts in the garbage? Unfortunately, no. We were presented such class conflict films which made no sense other than as TV serials masquerading as films in the 80s. In the 90s, this was at least an era old and need not have been made.
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Por Thozhil (2023)
5/10
Agenda driven film, Ratchasan repeat offender
11 July 2023
Not a genuine film, although has many twists and turns, with a lot of thrilling spots.

Unfortunately, has many "comedy" scenes which make us angry, and questions the credibility of the film.. This is not a good film, in spirit.. A murder suspect by the name similar to real life accused Ramkumar, is shown to have committed suicide in custody and died. This is later shown to be the false killer, thereby lending support to rumors that Ramkumar was not the real Nungambakkam murderer. Decide if you want to support this or not.

The Asok character has a flashback which makes one cringe.. Even in high school, one cannot narrate this "stone in manga tree and thief" story and get away without getting trolled. Some details they keep saying are not realistic and just falls into the "convenient for story's sake" trope.. This movie is not only low in budget, but in morals too.. The vilification of minorities and charities is done in a very open manner without repercussions.
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Custody (2023)
4/10
Boring and pointless.. Still, at times, a thrilling swashbuckler
10 July 2023
The essence of this film can be summarised in a line delivered by Chay to Jiiva, "These serious lines are not fitting for you... You follow the normal, jolly route that works for you". If VP follows this, the director will be happier.

The problem in this film is that all twists and turns are normal, easily predictable and cliched. At least, the film makes you sweat with the nail-biting tension running throughout the film. Naga-chaitanya was given due respect, and a lot of mass build-up scenes with effects. So, we cannot say Andhra-Tamil concept was a flaw.

The heroine is a great addition to the film, with her own complex equations brought into the dynamics. Aravind Swamy's complex witty character is a welcome breeze in this otherwise intense film. Ramki's swag with an army machine gun also makes quite a scene in a tense turn.

However, all scenes give us a feel that we have already seen these somewhere else. Jiiva's character is in particular one-dimensional, with a foolhardy nature. With such a low situational awareness, how could he become a cop?! (Not noticing hazards falling in a chaotic site). Maybe this explains why the cops were so weak in this movie. One welcome break is that Premji somehow works as a villain with a disgusting, vile presence. (The politicians were like jokers in the film. Sarath's character was at least demonic in his smoking scenes. The car driver who tries to give a lift, but lusts after the heroine though - could he get any sillier?)

We have to admit that one major blunder was to let go of Aravind Swamy's character in the end, just for the sake of innovation. The following scenes were even more disastrous. With better writing, and perhaps some more character depth to all roles, this could have been different. Still, if one has nothing better to do, one can watch this film for the unique 90's style filmmaking.
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Yaathisai (2023)
3/10
Plagiarism is not only for the big films
2 June 2023
You say the film is about Pandyas and yet you show Spartan moves, citing the Greek mercenaries who were body guards in Tamil kingdoms of yore.

Yet, the same scenes from "300" film are stolen for some action scenes. Also, the walking in front of fields is similar.. Even otherwise, famously the Greeks did not fight for the Pandyas except as palace guards as their shields and bronze full-body armour would have been incredibly hot in Indian climate. (Even the "300" film had incorrectly shown Spartan warriors to be naked, without armors. Why 'ee adicchan copy'?)

Other comments talk about scenes lifted from Viking and Apocalypto too.. Also, the "hakka dance" of New Zealand is appropriated. Is this called research work? The actors do not stick with the timeline, and many errors can be forgiven as this is a debut film

If you make a part 2, at least show Tamil culture. Where is the famous "Bodhisena" who sailed to Japan and invented a writing system there similar to Tamil? He lived in the time of Ranadheeran. (Watch "Odd Campus" channel's video on YouTube for info on him)

Lastly, Tamils never practiced the "impalement" punishment on civilians like shown.. (kaluvetru) Depicting raw scenes just for the sake of authenticity, is inauthentic in such cases. Overall, a great attempt and with higher budget, possibly can pull a miracle.
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8/10
The boys are back.... with a bang!
26 May 2023
I thought hard, and couldn't find a unforgivable flaw.. This film is thoroughly enjoyable. This film is strictly for the Bachelors, as usual with the Bachelor party films... Venkat Prabhu comedy lovers will also enjoy this, with many funny yet trendier scenes like in "Goa"/"Chennai 600028"

The film has enough twists and turns to keep one entertained, some surprise you well although you were expecting something alike to come about.. The flow feels organic and nothing feels stuffed or insulting.. The chemistry with the boys and the trouble with the local goon villains, all happen within the realms of reality. Seeing so much drama happen around us, having laughs often is a big boon. The characterisations are unique for the huge cast and deep enough to present an incredible kaleidoscope to entertain us. The story is deep enough for a comedy film and keeps us stay glued till the end.

The cricket scenes have heavy references to real life history.. Rockers 'Rajagopalan' is the Kapil Dev of the final match. Much like in history, he bowls incredibly tight and runs in the deep for very long to pull-off an unbelievable catch which turns the course of the match. Apart from the motivational speech which has the shades of this '83 World Cup final (defending a low total), the effort the actors have put in towards the game is admirable. We have seen actors and celebrities play the worst kind of cricket in old "Sun TV" games. Yet, you see all classic IPL style batting strokes and physical effort in great fielding (gully bowling too). Some Goa style dialogues are also pleasant ("Athu athu than. Ithu thu than" vs "Athu vera ithu vera").

As the "boys" from "Chennai 60028" have graduated to another level of life now, we have a 'mature' script.. Especially, if you have faced personal/social-media troubles after drinking with friends, you will love this for the catharsis and good times. We have other 'mature' elements in this film, especially with the 'Soppani sundari' plot-line. With India coming out of the Victorian-era prudery, we totally can admire such efforts. Since the 60s, mature themes have been present under-cover in Tamil films, so I do not understand why some might object now.. (Except ultra-orthodox, delusional people who misunderstand Indian culture to be as conservative as now).

The highlight of the film is Shiva's side-business of YouTube reviews (doubles as a side-track of comedy here). Bringing an online YouTuber to be in a few scenes was quite cool and we have a nice dig at him too (Small uncles vs Big uncle). The small boys playing cricket are grating enough to act as small villains and the "Theni family" also act as a medium-grade villan gang. While maintaining a taught screenplay, the director is creative enough to insert a few sodakku-balls into the game/film too. The Aravind's uncle character in the village is very entertaining, setting a great party mood although he comes in a few and impactful scenes. The surprises involving the cops and minister are extremely amusing. The tournament might have been dropped, yet "Chennai Sharks" have truly won the series!! Hope we have a "part 3" where the team visits Europe for an away series next! (Eurotrip?!) Having a "Hangover" x "Chennai 28" crossover would truly be epic!!!
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6/10
Fixed the fixe-able flaws of part1 - Moving saga of Aditta Karikalan, with boredom notwithstanding
6 May 2023
This movie is a laudable attempt at recreating a thousand year old world - Note this is a "world" and not merely the Tamil nations of the time.. You see Sri Lanka, Andhra, Telengana, Chattisgarh, Rajasthan, Maharastra and even Thailand, perhaps as historically Chola influence was far-flung in a sprawling sphere of influence. Therein lies the problem, the world creation has taken an entire first part 1 to accomplish and the second part merely wraps up the story; albeit with some great moments of cinematic finesse in terms of acting, music, cinematography, costume design and direction.

We have seen a lot of periodic drama by now.. Whether it be the home-brewn "Baahubali" franchise, or the Western "The Game of Thrones" franchise, fans always went in to see "PS2" with similar expectations. Granted, we know that these two examples were spectacular in part thanks to an illogical world with fantasy science and fictional creatures. Still, movies such as these always showed how thrilling historical fiction could be, and films like "23aam pulikesi" did not even involve fantasy. These movies are completely different from "Ponniyin Selvan", yet manage to make the audience enthralled throughout the screen time and grips one with various techniques from the cinematic craft's handbooks. This is what is missing in the "PS" franchise as a whole - the screenplay was co-written by stage play writers such as Kumaravel and the novel writer Jayamohan.. These two are quite talented and possibly the best at Tamil fiction in their respective media, yet they have neither the training nor the effort to convert the "PS" books into a compelling franchise on the big screen (as many have already noted)...

The director has spun his magic around this fictional portrayal of the Tamil kings of old.. and shown the characters involved as complicated, realistic beings who one can appreciate up-close. Buoyed by fabulous performances from the cast, Maniratnam has succeeded in his long-time dream of bringing "PS" to the big screen. Yet, being a director predominantly obsessed with romance and characterisations, he has failed to deliver the twists & turns deserving of a mammoth effort.

Also, the action scenes are unimaginative and lacking of the ancient time's technological prowess.. For instance, the "Seric steel" which was common at this time to make sharp weapons was the inspiration behind the "Valyrian steel" in "The song of ice and fire" book series which in turn was made into the hit TV series "A game of thrones". Yet, why do we not have a passing mention of this in this movie franchise?! You need to have this attention to detail when you have to back up such Herculean efforts by the leading cast of this movie. Also, the time had many Muslim shipwrights advance the navy of Cholas, we do not see even a little of this.. We at least see the Chinese in form of physicians, who were behind the silk and fire arrows of the fabled Chola gunboats. We do not see the Arabian horses which were the reason why Chola cavalry won against North India so effortlessly multiple times, being more well suited for fast raids and horse archery. At least, we see the elephants which were five times in number in the Chola army, when compared to the Gangetic plain empires, thanks to differing geographic conditions. Also, having a Tiger head in the ships just like Dragon heads in the Viking ships of this age - is a nice imaginative touch. Yet, at times reality is mightier than fiction like the Seric steel which was rumoured to hold its edge even after hitting granite and cut medieval everything from silk to the European broadswords in half during the crusades.

The genius of the director is to maintain Aditta till the very end. In fact, few had expected Aditta (played by Vikram) Karikalan's character to be in the second half. Yet, he holds sway till half an hour before the movie ends. Also, the first ten minutes of this final thirty minutes is about others discussing him and the next fifteen minutes of battle is for him, followed by a five minute summary of Rajaraja's accomplishments. A few ancient kings & generals later fasted as pious scholars, after PTSD. This was depicted as fiction, although it is not shown that Chola Brahmins were Aditta's assasins in reality. Still, the level of detail in the filming production is impeccable. You see amazing costume design which mirror Cholas of the time, while appealing to a nation's current sensibilities. Also, every frame is like a painting as most backdrops are brilliant if indoors thanks to the set-work/VFX, and beautiful if outdoors.. This level of detail to tell a story which winds its way around the Chola empire would have been better. The twists and turns are told in a way which invites yawns. You do not see the audience rooting for any character, as we are not allowed the time to let any individual's heart or nerve points sink in to our thoughts. For instance, Vikram Prabhu's character has been dealt with neatly according to the book. Yet, not allowing a rushed script around his actions would have been better - he looks like a comedy film's heroine rebounding like in Kalakalappu2. Also, we do not see the tone remaining consistent throughout the film, bewildering us further.

Every frame Vikram comes in the film is deserving of an applause. Be it the first few scenes of battle ready pitching, or the later scenes of roaring dialogues from atop a horse (as if he was born to be a king, and has lived forever atop a horse), or the later heated discussions; he has given the word "method acting" a new definition. All actors have done their parts exceedingly well, from Jayaram (some comic relief, at last!) to Karthi, Jayam Ravi (subtle smile from atop that elephant - wow), Parthiban (owned the fort, shined in the few scenes like a true General), Prabhu (thundered in his siege), Sarath (his emotional scenes made him the hero of the scenes), Lal (fitting tribute to who could have been Uttamasili's peer), Rahman (just splendid as the sage-like prince, stylish finesse notwithstanding), Trisha (Kundavai, the powerhouse), Prakashraj (nothing less than magnificent throughout), Aishwaraya Rai (A revelation in the Kadambur scenes). I do not have much complaints of what has been changed from the books; the team has told a wonderful fictional story, albeit in a bland and soul-less way. We do not want fantastical action where palm trees are turned to catapults for humans like in Baahubali, yet we at least want some creative and engaging action where we enjoy what we see. Yet, we witness just regular action from any masala movie - which assistant director was responsible for these, I wonder..

The final action scene was marvellous for some, and laborious for some to sit through. Either way, the amount spent on this seemed to have paid dividends, as some loved this. The CGI was good, although some scenes had goofy VFX in the movie as a whole.. I have a few gripes about the climax though... Jayam Ravi did look incredibly upset about a loss in the scene before the battle. Yes, I agree that the happiness at gaining back some lost comrades/family & territory would be gratifying. Yet, I do not understand how the whole kingdom could move on so quickly, onto a gleeful coronation ceremony. At least, a few moments of reflection about the loss would have been worth displaying for the believability factor.

The opening of the film gives a more in-depth background to the whole romance in question of the film, replete with "Thalapathy" vibes. The river islet scene with Karthi (Vanthiyathevan) blindfolded and Trisha (Kundavai) is very popular in social media, deservingly so and yet laughable at times. The intensity of Kishore (Ravidasan) seems to have been misused in this part, making his character less impactful. The immense potential in these Pandyan rebel actors has been wasted. After showing Ravidasan's gang as pointless before the Chola princes, the main villains seems to be Nandhini and an antihero like Aditta Karikalan himself - thereby irking many Tamil fundamentalists online. Yet, the main fault of both films is not making, fighting these Pandyans a problem for the Chola princes. The unexpected Jayam Ravi (Arunmozhi/Rajaraja) fight to fend off Soman (Nawaz Khan) and gang is amazing for many viewers, yet is not choreographed beautifully enough to lend any justice to the villains. Strong villains add challenges to heroes in a movie, yet the palpable lack of tension whenever behemoths like Soman/Ravidasan enter the scene is ridiculous to say the least. Arunmozhi is shown to have difficulty in fighting the Rastrakuta king, so the ease with which he dispatched the Pandyan rebels is ridiculous (starting from the first part). Although, this inconsistency is nothing compared to other loopholes, this is glaring as we needed some tension at least, to have a film which does not lay bare the events without any suspense.

Poonguzhazhi and Senthan Amudhan are wasted, yet this is okay. Mandhakini being a strong rockclimbing deep-sea diver is reasonable, although some who have never met such people balk at this idea.. Some staging around these characters could have been done with a lot more creativity. Yet, we have some slow moving, repetitive scenes. The main fault, as I emphasise again, is that the film is boredom inducing, although several faults from the first part were fixed. The scenes are beautiful, of a love saga from a thousand years ago, yet this could have been told in a way more interesting manner. Watch this if you are waiting for a fitting and better end to the first part. This could also work if you are into visual spectacles, AR Rahman's wonderful music, amazing drama, Maniratnam's romance and/or masterful acting.

PS: The standout scene of PS emerging from a Buddhist vihara before the intermission, was spectacular. However, silly action sequences & the goofy speech with an elephant were off-putting to many. Vikram-Aish face-off scene was fabulous.
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4/10
great movie, but.... where are the Cholas?
17 October 2022
The film is narrated in a problematic fashion as many have pointed out: The first half is as flat as Cauvery (Ponni) herself and as rushed as the River floods. The second half is confusingly twisted over many events with Nandhini (Aishwarya Rai) as the calm centre/eye of the cyclone. Kalki's first two books are titled, "Pudhu Vellam (transl. New Floods)" and "Suzharkaatru (transl. Whirlwind)". The first part is mostly about these books and hence maybe this is why the script is so(!!!); this is unconvincing for such a mammoth effort.

The three main drawbacks of the film are the half-baked action scenes, the laughable VFX at times and the lack of emotional exploration of all characters except the co-regent Karikalan. (Adittha was acting as a king along with his sick dad, Sundara Chola. Why show him as only a prince?! Need not stick to the books if some sense has to prevail). With the movie raking in a phenomenal amount of collections, we can hope that the second part has better budgets for the graphics and re-editing of action scenes with better grit/believability. Plus, the last three books are titled, "Kolai Vaal (transl. Sword of Slaughter)", "Manimagudam (transl. The Crown)" and "Thiyaaga Sigaram (transl. The Pinnacle of Sacrifice)". With more action scenes, more crown scenes (as the director focused on good VFX budget only for the crown) and more emotional exploration in these three titles, we can hopefully expect that the three main drawbacks are remedied in the second half at the least; which we can easily expect to be over 8 or 9 stars for many.

The main reason this film has not resonated with a lot of people is that the screenplay was co-written by drama playwrights. Movie is a different medium with a lot more possibility in terms of visual spectacles, framing and editing. Playwrights lack the imagination to directly work on movie scripts without rigorous training. Maniratnam was smart enough to catch on to this early on, he added a lot of action scenes and panorama shots which weren't present in the book. Yet, when you start a movie with an introduction scene set in the Rastrakuta battle, why not feature the Arabian horses which the Chola elite had favored? So much for "realistic" effort the director had preferred.. The scene even had onagers/mangonels which weren't mentioned in ancient Tamil accounts of warfare (Taken from Aayirathil Oruvan?). With the frivolous graphics of the said siege instrument, the palace walls and other war settings, the mood of the film was spoiled from the first scene; thereby lowering our expectations. Thankfully, the great acting by Vikram and Karthi saved the tone in subsequent scenes.

Yet, Karthi could have used body doubles in the palace escape scenes. The aim seems to have been something like "Prince of Persia" or "Armor of God" and yet we got to see old Captain Vijayakanth's rope action. We need better and braver decision makers in today's Tamil cinema if one aims for a "Pan-India" success. PS-1 has bombed in all states except TN and Kerala. Just showing palaces in Rajasthan, MP, Chattisgarh and Telengana isn't going to attract audience from the North. You need some story that spawns characters from all over India and something appealing to all humans. An idea that could have worked was featuring a North Indian actor as Vanthiyathevan such as Tiger Shroff: he could have pulled off great stunts although acting would have suffered. The character was also from the borderlands and Tiger could have been described as from the North who came to TN ("Vanthiya").

You can argue that if you show Chola invasion of most of what was India back then, of course the rest of India is going to take offence and give bad reviews. Yet, maybe this is why many from Punjab/Haryana alone loved the movie in the North, lol. Considering all this, why show Uraiyur, Pazhayarai, Tanjore and Kadambur like some Marati fortress?! The film bombed in the North in any case. You had one chance to show the spectacle that was Chola architecture with today's VFX and you blew it, Tamil cinema!

What worked in this film - the characters, acting, blocking, comedy and surprisingly the costume design which was painstakingly balancing an appeal to all Indians while maintaining a "Chola" look. Jayaram and Karthi stole the show, as did Vikram, Aishwarya among dozens of other excellent performances. For this alone, I saw the film twice. Vikram Prabhu comes like the grand Pallava king on a horse when entering an enemy fort victoriously after breaking their gate; even small scenes and characters shine. The grandeur you can see in INOX is missing in the normal version though. Somehow passing off Thailand as Lanka is disappointing, we know what these places look like and aren't fools! The worst was showing Telengana-Andhra border as the Cauvery bank!! I mean, what was the production team thinking!!! Just shooting there didn't help the film run in these states, so why not shoot Tamil films in TN I wonder.

Overall, the movie has to be lauded for bringing an imaginary version of the Cholas to our eyes. All the songs were filmed with an influence of SE Asia and this shares the vision of A R Rahman.. He said in the audio launch that he spent two weeks in Bali to find any traces of our culture left behind in the only Hindu island of the world with non-Indians... For the effort alone, I do not feel like giving a two star for this film and this is in no way a comparison to "The Game of Thrones" as the director spoke in an interview (How can you not focus on action and say all this? The Game of Thrones even has different fighting styles in the same kingdom from the Northern & the Southern parts. Like, more elbow pushes and hacking in one vs slashes and thrusts in the other.) The disappointment extends a bit about A R Rahman as well, in some scenes the background music is just annoyingly poor. Maybe all this is because of expectations the team had set, hyping for marketing can backfire like this did in the rest of India. Plus, A R Rahman maybe hung out only with Indians in Bali and only listened to the stage performances. There are many locals with different singing styles, these could have given a better tone in the "Devaralan Aatam" scene. The film does have excellent choreography and visual art, yet the slacker of a cinematographer spoiled many scenes with his unimaginative efforts for such a "legend" that was planned to shoot.

If you say that the original novel did not have anything in it to be made into a compelling film, you need to agree that the novel is not something epic and untouchable. Parantaka Chola's first son was killed in battle with the Rastrakutas and his grandson Sundara Chola was named Parantaka II after reclaiming most of the lost lands after the kingdom broke up. Fearing the rebels, Adittha had waged a fierce battle at Sevur and decapitated the Madurai king. The Pandyas had escaped to Lanka with the emblem which was needed to assert authority in Madurai. This is why Rajaraja was in Lanka trying to bring the island under control so that the Pandya region is with Chola empire as well. Yet, we see Rajaraja as a forest camper in Lanka for no reason other than territorial expansion. (Even his make-up is off, needlessly dark with weird beard - "Arunmozhi" would have focused on discussions and not war alone, he needn't be so tanned). If you want to show reality, you might have to sacrifice many characters and show the aspirations of the main characters first. This film could have easily been a 7/10 with a higher budget and much higher with a tauter screenplay, lesser characters.. I'm sure someone in the future generation will attempt with a better budget, lol...

Prakash Raj's acting as the ageing Sundara Chola deserves a mention. Prabhu's presence works surprisingly well, especially in the beach landing action scenes. A plethora of actors make their mark and yet are undermined by the poor script's lacklustre portrayal of everyone's interactions. A scriptwriter had famously asked if he can make a scene where Vanthiyathevan tames a bull, for some drama.. The illustrated series Ponniyin Selvan was an entirely different medium. In any case, the book fans will never be satisfied with the film adaptation. So, this argument is counter-productive and yes, the filmmakers need to include more action scenes if these are necessary to drive the character building. In a novel, action scenes are downplayed, as these cannot be portrayed well enough to satisfy the audience, yet in a film this is not so and this has to be taken advantage of, for a compelling visual spectacle like Baahubali or Eega. The drama is important and yet, need help from action scenes if adventure-driven plots such as these are to be successful. Kishore's impeccable performance as the villain is the lynchpin which makes the wheels spin in this period adventure drama. Vikram's scenes needed more length and variety, although the powerful performance by the actor leaves a lingering impact which makes us glued to the story of the film, making us wait for the second part now.
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8/10
An interesting take on the arts in school life, along with the downsides of extreme art addiction
11 June 2022
The film works as a whole as great entertainment and also as an engrossing message to the society. I am not sure what to make of the heavily dramatic climax, does the director want us to love arts? Or is he warning about the burden that comes with loving anything too much? My guess is the later, as he is an artist himself (Cinematic art). The film stays buoyant from the starting to the end, typical of a high school setting and all characters feel natural. The teacher who inspires everyone seems to breathe life into all his fans (students) and increasingly dwells in our hearts as a hero who lets us "live" in this ever-competitive, heartless, unequal world.

Overall, I walked away from the film as a changed man with lifelong repercussions. The movie is labeled as legendary by many others as well and I recommend this wholeheartedly if you like offbeat films about education. The dialogues are lovely and all the interactions between characters are interesting. The film has enough twists and turns to keep us engaged throughout its duration..
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Red Cliff (2008)
6/10
Expensive film with some sappy characterisations
11 June 2022
I am not sure if this film is supposed to massage the ego of many peasant loving folks, yet I found the importance given to farmers in a historically epic battle strange. Farmers were not of such prime importance in the history, c'mon. The film has some amazing action scenes and depicts many complicated battle scenes well

Still, I found the immature setup of interactions with characters and the overly sentimental overtures off-putting. The acting is top-notch from the star cast, make no mistake. The direction could have been better and not just made this like a fantasy-like film. This was a real life battle after all and characters can be shown realistically

The overly complicated battle formations were just the musings of people about what could have brought them victory from the throes of defeat in specific situations. There was no need to emphasise on strange methods to imply the greatness of characters. Overall, given the budget and star cast, little could have gone wrong in depicting the battle as legendary... Yet, some aspects did go wrong in providing a complete entertainer.
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The Host (2006)
7/10
Best example of an expert director's touch in any genre
11 June 2022
Monster movies are seldom the forte of art film directors. One cannot be sure if this director is so.. Still, most of his films include heavy detailing that is more typical of artistic ventures. This film as well, leaves us with unique characterisations and the dynamics between them so epic that we are in for a treat! Not only can you enjoy a gripping thriller, but also are you treated to original scenes that come out of nowhere and surprise!

This is a must watch for any fan of the director and the actors. You can skip if you absolutely detest monster films, though I would still recommend this to you.
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5/10
Not the best, has its dull and drab moments
11 June 2022
The premise of the film has all the elements of a hit Korean rom-com. Yet, somehow I felt the leads to be a bit annoying. The male lead is often bullied and this is obvious from the synopsis. The female lead is not as charismatic as needed for us to not hate her.

The quiet little life the protagonist has certainly keeps us entertained. However, the whole dynamic as a whole is not so excellent that it helps us enjoy the film thoroughly

Overall, I am not very fond of this although at one point I would have rated this highly at even 9/10. Given that I have seen other works of the female lead and many other Korean films by now, I just do not feel this lives up to any standards. The comedy and different characterisation are indeed noteworthy. Still, the male lead doesn't provide us ample reactions in many scenes to make us like this film.
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4/10
A few comic moments don't make a movie good
11 June 2022
Movies either are dreamy and allow an escape from the harsh reality, or show the gritty reality with an aim to evoke connections with the audience. This falls somewhere in the center. Despite interesting performances from the leads, this is not a very engaging film. . The fight scenes are natural with good characterisation of the villain. Yet, we are not sure what the director wants to achieve with the direction the stories take us through.

This is a subtle attempt at showing the different people living in a city. Yet, this is shown without the overreaching drama that spoils many such attempts and this alone is worth appreciating. Some people who might connect with the characters and want a similar escape might enjoy the movie. For the normal people, I am not sure this is an appealing movie. Overall, for Vijay Sethupathi fans this could be an underwhelming film too.
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Thamizh Padam (2010)
10/10
My most favorite Tamil Padam of all time! no kidding...
10 June 2022
The Thamizh Padam is a good starting point if you want to see a spoof of all tropes and stereotypes of Tamil language films (Kollywood). What's not there to make fun of? With oversized heroic arcs in films and over dramatised trivia in cliched characterisations, we cannot help but beg directors to make different movies.

A lot of "important" people were very offended that this film was made. This shows the success of the film in capturing the very essence of a spoof comedy. Quite a few aspects of archaic filmmaking techniques were brutally trolled at times, giving a wake up call to film makers. I have a feeling that this film is more responsible for Kollywood's new batch of fresh films coming out in the last decade. This film would have helped more than any filmmaking academy on what "not to make".

The film follows along a main lead, complete with the introduction song. At times, the portrayal even questions all sections of the society irking quite a few.. Overall, the nonstop comedy and the hilarious setups make for a comfortable viewing. This is for you if want a comedy spoof that questions all pointless scenes in Tamil films.
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8/10
Classic "Karate" film with the rare cheesy moments
10 June 2022
Make no mistake, this is much better than the Jackie Chan reboot and the Netflix sequel (TV series). Yet, do not enter expecting a sculpted film if you want to enjoy this well. Within the martial arts cinema world, this is a veritable masterpiece! Do not miss this if you love Karate!

Starting with a typical setting and some cliched portions about the love interest, we move onto more engaging aspects of the film.. The people will roll their eyes at the cheesy settings at the protagonist's home. Yet, the stark contrast you find in the home, of the now immortal "Miyagi Sensei", will improve viewers' mood and interests

The entire training arc is so legendary that it has inspired many a similar scenes in innumerable movies that followed in the genre. Towards the end, the explosive acting (not action!) from the main characters will move you into speechlessness. Finally, you do see some quirky nature of the characters which make you smile with approval and cheer on the final explosive action scenes.

Overall, never miss this if you want a classic martial arts film!
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3-Iron (2004)
9/10
A must watch film of the late Kim Ki-Duk
10 June 2022
One of the best films of the late legendary director Kim Ki-Duk. This film move something ethereal inside you that you cannot quite describe in words.

The whole premise is so outlandish that you realise that you are in for a treat if you like unique films. The art film treatment given is the main reason behind the many silent portions of this movie which can make some uncomfortable (It could be a Buddhist thing as well, as I have observed this in many Japanese films too). All characters are given enough depth and importance that you realize that everyone had valid emotions behind their actions. The powerful performances make us love the nature of interactions had in the settings brought about by the screenplay. The film has a quiet and meditative sense to it as well.

Overall, the film is a great and unique one that is not to be missed if you want to explore the fabled works of Kim Di-Duk. This will also satisfy art film lovers.
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Rashomon (1950)
10/10
Epic view on perspectives
10 June 2022
This is an absolute masterpiece by the legendary Akira Kurosawa. Buoyed by riveting performances, this story explores the fragility of our memories and the inherent difficult that comes with solving/judging a crime based on testimonies of purported eye witnesses.

The length is not a barrier to watching, especially as the narration is solid and the film leaves no stone unturned when it comes to the craft of perfectionist productions. Many later movies have paid their homage to this film and we can see how why.. The vision of this filmmaker is just impossible to fathom by normal people like many...
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Finding Nemo (2003)
8/10
One of the best animated films, content is suitable for children too
10 June 2022
The film has many bubbly characters and is set upon a simple premise. The amazing animation takes us on an adventurous journey through the ocean in this quest.

I do not think I'm an expert in judging content for children, yet I feel this film might as well be mostly aimed at kids. Given the relatively child-like portrayals of dangerous sea monsters, I am inclined to consider this more of a wholesome entertainer than an epic saga/drama

Overall, the film has a mix of unique characters, a good screenplay to keep us engaged and the voice performances enough to carry the narrative adequately. This is a good watch for comedy/animation lovers.
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1/10
Better to avoid this
10 June 2022
Unless you dislike the rich or recently went through love failure, this movie will not satisfy you.

The star cast cannot do justice to the film which fails to build upon the weak storyline. I cannot imagine why this tragedy tries to achieve redemption for the characters at the end in a twisted way.. We can only imagine the disbelief in a street smart person during the confrontation scenes in the flashback with the men in power. With such levels of disconnect from reality, it is no wonder that the film keeps snaking paths in pointless directions till the end, unable to leave any impact in us.
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6/10
I do not recommend
10 June 2022
I watched with a hope that this will be better than the first part.

Yet, as most live action adaptations go, this was not anywhere close to my image of what "Death Note" stood for. Maybe this is for a different kind of audience.
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Yojimbo (1961)
9/10
The Grandfather to all "Wild Western" films
10 June 2022
A few people know well that the "Star Wars" series were inspired in part by the wandering samurai (Ronin) films like "Yojimbo" of fabled Japanese director, Akira Kurosowa. This speaks volumes about how important a movie this is. Even from a pure entertainment point of view, this film is extremely good and never misses a note.

Toshiro Mifune gives one of his best performances. The film has a plethora of characters who all perform adequately for this movie to be impeccable. Barring a few moments where the acting of some can be labeled cheesy, the movie is top notch. Some moments do remind us of similar scheming in samurai movies. Yet, the writing is so fresh that we are never reminded of any stereotypes and are instead greeted with an invigorating thread of unique perspectives offered through this Ronin.
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The Matrix (1999)
10/10
Develops a simple theory into a multi-layered epic saga
10 June 2022
The highlight of the film is the innovative action sequences and the groundbreaking camerawork setup to capture this in its brilliance (for 1999). This sent shockwaves through the cinematic world and still influences innumerable action scenes in films.

The biggest strength of this film is that it just doesn't go lazy on the concept behind its science-fiction and the excellent action scenes. The film builds momentum on the back of deep characters, well developed story, epic screenplay, impeccable acting and a nuanced portrayal of philosophical musings in the backdrop of all the heavy science-fiction backed world this film functions in

This is one of the films which you just cannot miss if you are a Keanu Reeves fan or an action sci-fi fan.
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7/10
The making of the Don, from the Don's perspective
10 June 2022
Every once in a while, people always ask us to look at things from a different angle. "People become criminals because of the circumstances and not are mostly not inherently evil". We see no such pleading in the film.. Coming after the release of the very successful first half, the movie tells the backstory of the patriarch.

We can see the setting of the United States when the first wave of immigrants had rushed to New York City from the Old World. Rather than being intriguing as the first film, this delves headfirst into telling the story of how power was built from almost nothing.

I saw this film only for the excellent acting and direction. Apart from this, I do not condone violence or organised crime, much like almost everyone who rate these films highly. Yet, I still feel bad that such films were at times misused by "Cosa Nostra" as propaganda for hiring men.
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