Tamil

Pulivaal Review – Times of India

Recommended

This is definitely a juicy plot and in Vemal and PrasannaMarimuthu has actors who look their parts. And, yet, he slips because he cannot nail the tone required for this subject. He devotes a rather large amount of time on trivial elements that hamper the story’s flow — like Valliappan’s romance with a co-worker (with Ilaiyaraaja’s songs turning into BGMs), Soori’s comedy (which is a compilation of many SMS jokes), and out-of-place songs (that are unimaginatively picturized). Every time something tense happens, the actions cuts to some of these mundane scenes and so, we never really get involved with the story. It is only in the final 30 minutes that the film shows some signs of sticking true to its genre but, by then, it is too late.