Inner demons begins to unravel when 5 friends get together for a booze party in a remote location.Inner demons begins to unravel when 5 friends get together for a booze party in a remote location.Inner demons begins to unravel when 5 friends get together for a booze party in a remote location.
- Awards
- 3 wins & 1 nomination
Photos
Gireesh Nair
- Thirumeni
- (as Girish Nair)
Abhija Sivakala
- Geetha
- (as Aabhija Shivakala)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe movie contains a 53 minute long shot.
Featured review
Not A Game. ♦ Grade B-
It took me more than six months to find a source and watch this highly acclaimed social drama. And once I finished watching it, I understood why people use so many adjectives to define it.
On an election day in the Indian state of Kerala, a group of five adult friends decide to spend an entire day in a dilapidated building few kilometers away from the city hustle-bustle. Their aim is to engage in incessant boozing and revisit the good old times. However, once they begin and reach a point where debauchery (albeit without sex and other drugs) sounds like an understatement, things start to go south. The members of the group, in their own idiosyncratic inebriated ways, begin to share their opinions. Heated discussions ensue as the nature joins them, lashing out its unparalleled powers through a downpour. One thing leads to another and things get rocky, but eventually they calm down, only to next play a silly game. A game they used to play when they were in school. A game which they don't know is not as innocuous as it seems to be.
The first thing that viewers are going to notice in the film is the terrible cinematography. All excuses of it being intentional goes down the drain because you cannot see anything. A bunch of people are conversing - that's all you will understand in the first 20 minutes. What they are talking about? Or who is presently talking? Nope. You will see leaves and barks in place of human faces.
In the first 20 minutes, you will perceive it as five adults fooling around on an off-day just because they can. Ogling at that lady who is preparing tapioca and chicken curry for them or forcing the helper guy to consume uncontrolled amounts of alcohol is what they essentially do. Then they begin to talk about politics, the society, the concepts of rape and hypocrisy - and that's when the bitterness sweeps in. It's like the thunderous downpour brings a wave into the room where these people are sitting, igniting their selves to speak up and engage in debates.
A lot of topics such as racism and caste discrimination are sampled here before the film crescendos to its final juncture where the subject shifts to that of "corruption in a democracy". The game they play is one that most of us have played at least once. But, the metaphoric perception the writers bring with it is remarkable. Unni R's story shines light into the natural state of a constitution and how corruption breeds in it due to the people and their outlooks. Sasidharan uses raw footage to convey the story and succeeds to some extent. He tries to embarrass the audience by showing them their own mirror images in the five protagonists as they set out.
You cannot call the film entertainment because it has no qualities of being any. This is serious cinema and should be perceived as a strong message to the people at large who do not mind consuming chicken, but repulse at the thought of killing a hen. It's a film that is going to haunt you for at least a day. After that, you will forget about it because that's how we all are. Like dust in the wind which moves on and on.
It is evidently made on a shoestring budget with heavy usage of improvisation. The dialogues and actions were allegedly spontaneous as Wikipedia tells me, and it may be true. The final long shot of more than 50 minutes is amazing to watch, along with the heart-rending climax.
BOTTOM LINE: Sanal Saidharan's "Ozhivudivasathe Kali" is a disturbing film which speaks truth and nothing but the truth. Watch it today on Reelmonk!
Can be watched with a typical Indian family? NO
On an election day in the Indian state of Kerala, a group of five adult friends decide to spend an entire day in a dilapidated building few kilometers away from the city hustle-bustle. Their aim is to engage in incessant boozing and revisit the good old times. However, once they begin and reach a point where debauchery (albeit without sex and other drugs) sounds like an understatement, things start to go south. The members of the group, in their own idiosyncratic inebriated ways, begin to share their opinions. Heated discussions ensue as the nature joins them, lashing out its unparalleled powers through a downpour. One thing leads to another and things get rocky, but eventually they calm down, only to next play a silly game. A game they used to play when they were in school. A game which they don't know is not as innocuous as it seems to be.
The first thing that viewers are going to notice in the film is the terrible cinematography. All excuses of it being intentional goes down the drain because you cannot see anything. A bunch of people are conversing - that's all you will understand in the first 20 minutes. What they are talking about? Or who is presently talking? Nope. You will see leaves and barks in place of human faces.
In the first 20 minutes, you will perceive it as five adults fooling around on an off-day just because they can. Ogling at that lady who is preparing tapioca and chicken curry for them or forcing the helper guy to consume uncontrolled amounts of alcohol is what they essentially do. Then they begin to talk about politics, the society, the concepts of rape and hypocrisy - and that's when the bitterness sweeps in. It's like the thunderous downpour brings a wave into the room where these people are sitting, igniting their selves to speak up and engage in debates.
A lot of topics such as racism and caste discrimination are sampled here before the film crescendos to its final juncture where the subject shifts to that of "corruption in a democracy". The game they play is one that most of us have played at least once. But, the metaphoric perception the writers bring with it is remarkable. Unni R's story shines light into the natural state of a constitution and how corruption breeds in it due to the people and their outlooks. Sasidharan uses raw footage to convey the story and succeeds to some extent. He tries to embarrass the audience by showing them their own mirror images in the five protagonists as they set out.
You cannot call the film entertainment because it has no qualities of being any. This is serious cinema and should be perceived as a strong message to the people at large who do not mind consuming chicken, but repulse at the thought of killing a hen. It's a film that is going to haunt you for at least a day. After that, you will forget about it because that's how we all are. Like dust in the wind which moves on and on.
It is evidently made on a shoestring budget with heavy usage of improvisation. The dialogues and actions were allegedly spontaneous as Wikipedia tells me, and it may be true. The final long shot of more than 50 minutes is amazing to watch, along with the heart-rending climax.
BOTTOM LINE: Sanal Saidharan's "Ozhivudivasathe Kali" is a disturbing film which speaks truth and nothing but the truth. Watch it today on Reelmonk!
Can be watched with a typical Indian family? NO
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- An Off-Day Game
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- ₹1,500,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 45 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 16:9 HD
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