Tuesday, August 23, 2016

Appa

My review: Appa


In our younger years there used to be some movies which were huge hits when the dialogue portions of the movie were released as audio. Most of these movies dealt with issues that affect the society and had powerful dialogues. The movie as a whole would have been an average affair but they raked in the moolahs through these audio cassettes. Samuthirakani's "Appa" is a perfect candidate for such a audio release.  His angst against the crooked education system and the pressurising parents are well and duly noted, but the movie is only talk and talk and more talk. Characters keep talking on and on and on before the tedium sets in.

Though the scenes and sermons directed at the faulty education system is laudatory, Samuthirakani seems to be paranoid in almost all things modern. Case in point is institutional delivery.  In the times when the country is striving for cent percent institutionalised delivery, in this movie Samuthirakani has seen it with a paranoia and dolls out unscientific eulogies on home delivery which is regressive. Likewise he seems to have an outlook that is tinged with paranoia with respect to anything and everything that is not traditional. 


But on the same time there are exceptional sequences like the one in which he allays the fear of his adolescent son in dealing with opposite sex. But even a good sequence like that of a person who is physically challenged achieving something in life is marred by overdose of melodrama  which is what pulls down the movie's quality. 

All the actors have had a field day in projecting their histrionic skills to the maximum that there is no room for subtlety. Technically movie is very tacky. Ilayaraja's background score is the sole redeeming factor in other wise banal film making.  

On the whole, "Appa" is an overdose of on your face propaganda enacted by over the top actors marred by overenthusiastic direction though the intention seems noble.

Bottomline: Pressure of speech 

2.5/5

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