Sunday, September 25, 2016

Aandavan Kattalai

My review: Aandavan Kattalai


Manikandan seems to be one of those rare creators who don't know how to make a dishonest movie. In the three films he has made so far none of the movies had anything that can be characterised as contrived, or artificial. He has this knack of taking up a simple knot and weaving a very interesting plot that keeps you hooked to the screen. And another strength of his is the casting and the work he extracts from his cast. In none of his movies do you feel like watching actors act instead you feel like a spectator keeping a voyeuristic view of  real lives unfolding on screen. 

Co-written by Manikandan along with Arul Chezhiyan and Anucharan, "Aandavan Kattalai" is one of the best written movies of the year. A fan of such well written Malayalam movies, this one gave me a feel of watching one of those. That the movie deals with a message that crooked path never succeed, you don't feel even for a second that this message is fed to you. Instead as you leave the theatre you keep ruminating about it and keeps you thinking. And that the whole movie has a breezy, feel good feel with a healthy  undercurrent of humour is a task that even the most established names in the Tamil film industry fail to achieve time and again or never attempt to achieve.  

There are numerous scenes that are gems and keep you cheerful and thinking at the same time. The stretch that deals with finding a house for rent for bachelors in Chennai, the one in the court room where there seems to be more people vying to get divorces that those who are getting married, the casualness with which there seems to be a web of corrupt individuals who cut across various departments who get glued by the brokers or middlemen in dealing with each and everything that seems impossible for a common man to even think of, the list keeps going on and on. 

When was the last time you have a srilankan refugee character portrayed with such dignity and reality without making them a caricature to make political statement. When was the last time you have seen a movie that deals with corruption that doesn't paint these corrupt individuals in black and white. When was the last time you have seen a movie in which the strict straight forward officials portrayed with humanity without compromising on their honesty. When was the last time you have seen amovie that deals with corruption and doesn't end with the protagonist going a long sermon in the end towards the audience. 


Casting is topnotch in this movie in which each and every character is written memorably however minor it may be. The family court judge, the CBI officer, the regional passport officer, the house owner, the old man who fudges signatures, Karmegakuzhali's mom, Sri lankan refugee friend, the fake passport dealer, the counsellors, the advocate and his assistant, the list is endless. Casting for each of these roles are perfect to the Tee and the performances of these actors so effortless and natural. 

Vijay Sethupathy is terrific in an understated role. It has been a long time since one has seen him so casual and natural without having to try prove his acting prowess. Rithika Singh once again vindicates that fact that she is one of the astounding talents to looks out for. Unlike "Iruthi Sutru" this movie doesn't have much for her as far as stimulating her acting prowess is concerned yet she makes her mark in the limited opportunity. Especially watch out for that scene towards the end when Vijay Sethupathy proposes to her and her reactions to that, just terrific. 

Movie gets rounded off with a very supportive back ground score by K and seamless and fluid cinematography by Shanmugasundaram. Manikandan in my view is the next big name to contend with in tamil cinema, who makes pure cinema with content that is both classy and that which strikes a chord with the audience too. I rate him better than other overrated yet talented auteurs like Karthik Subburaj, Vetrimaran, Ram, etc. 

On the whole, "Aandavan Kattalai" is one of the most well made and thoroughly enjoyable movie of the year with a pertinent message for the current society.

Bottomline: Extraordinary cinema

4.5/5 


No comments: