First Look Poster Of Actor Arun Vijay’s ‘Sinam’ Out Now

The first look poster of actor Arun Vijay’s next film Sinam is out now. Helmed by GNR Kumaravelan who shot to fame with his critically acclaimed Haridas, the film is bankrolled by Movie Slides Pvt Ltd.

The poster features the left-half of fierce cop ‘R Pari Venkat’, Arun Vijay’s character as his name badge reads. We also find exhibits, newspaper pieces and caution tape on the left side of the poster. Arun Vijay dons the police attire once again after his crime-thriller Kuttram 23.

Director-producer Mani Ratnam launched the first look poster on Arun Vijay’s birthday.

“This is more than what I asked for and a birthday bonanza beyond my imagination. To have legendary filmmaker Mani Ratnam sir launch the first look of my film is a huge blessing and I strongly believe is an addition of a positive vibe to the movie. Working in his directorial for Chekka Chivantha Vaanam was an incredible experience where I unlearnt and acquired new traits of performances. While 2018 gave me such an amazing birthday, the magic repeats with his Midas-touch for Sinam,” said Arun Vijay.

The film reportedly deals with a ‘current crisis in the society’ and has its share of fictional elements. Palak Lalwani who was last seen in Sixer plays the female lead with Kaali Venkat in a significant role. Shabir of Nenjamundu Nermaiyundu Odu Raja fame is composing music while cinematography is by S Gopinath, who earlier worked with Arun Vijay in Thadam. Michael helms art with Raja Mohammed on edit and Stunt Silva choreographing action sequences.

The actor celebrated his birthday with family and friends on the sets of Sinam which is currently in its second schedule. It will hit screens next year.

Here is the first look poster of Sinam.

Meanwhile, Arun Vijay will next be seen in Naveen M’s Agni Siragugal alongside Vijay Antony and Akshara HaasanKarthick Naren‘s Mafia alongside Prasanna and Priya Bhavani Shankar and Vivek’s Boxer alongside Ritika Singh. The actor recently shot for Agni Siragugal with the Nomad Stunts team at Kazakhstan and his Boxer is currently in the post-production stage.

Marking the actor’s birthday, the makers of Mafia have released a poster featuring Arun Vijay on a Royal Enfield and have revealed that his character is ‘Aryan’. He has also completed his dubbing for the same.

Watch the teaser of Mafia here.

Tanhaji: The Unsung Warrior Trailer Starring Ajay Devgn, Saif Ali Khan

Gulshan Kumar, T-Series & Ajay Devgn ffilms Presents official trailer of the most awaited bollywood movie TANHAJI -THE UNSUNG WARRIOR in 3D, Directed by Om Raut, will release on 10th January 2020.
Tanhaji- The Unsung Warrior is an Indian biographical period drama film based on the life of legendary Tanaji Malusare, starring Ajay Devgn, Saif Ali Khan, Kajol in the lead roles.
4th Feb 1670: The surgical strike that shook the Mughal Empire!! Witness history like never before #TanhajiTheUnsungWarrior #AjayDevgn #SaifAliKhan

Directed By: Om Raut
Produced By: Ajay Devgn
Produced By: Bhushan Kumar, Krishan Kumar

Teaser Of ‘Dhanusu Raasi Neyargalae’ Starring Harish Kalyan and Rebba Monica John Out Now

The teaser of Harish Kalyan starrer Dhanusu Raasi Neyargalae is out now. The film helmed by debutant Sanjay Bharathi is bankrolled by Gokulam Gopalan’s Sree Gokulam Movies. The actor will be seen romancing debutant Digangana Suryavanshi and Bigil fame Rebba Monica John.

The teaser features a Sagittarian Arjun (Harish Kalyan) listening to the predictions of an astrologer for his wedding and looking out for a Virgo. He is seen rejecting, romancing and shaking a leg with a couple of girls including Digangana Suryavanshi and Rebba Monica John. The teaser ends with Yogi Babu in a saffron attire, wishing the audience prosperity and announcing the title of the film.

The film is touted to be a rom-com that revolves around an automobile mechanic whose life decisions are all based on astrology.

“The characterisation of Arjun was based on the traits of ‘Dhanusu Raasi’ people. The protagonist happens to be focused on his dreams and so does the heroine, who has her own ideologies. There are a few more characters in the film that have unique qualities. The heroine has been named KR Vijaya just to avoid the stereotypical names. The first half of the film will be in my style and the second half has my father Santhana Bharathi‘s influence. Harish Kalyan will be seen playing the boy next door. In my childhood, I admired Navarasa Nayagan Karthik sir for the chocolate boy he essayed in Varusham 16. I wanted to project Harish Kalyan in a similar shade. There are five songs of different genres in the album composed by Ghibran,” says director Sanjay Bharathi.

Apart from the lead, Dhanusu Raasi Neyargalae stars Munishkanth, Yogi Babu, Pandiarajan, Charlie, Renuka, Mayilsamy, Sangili Murugan, Daniel Annie Pope, TSK, Kumki Ashwin, Haritha and Samyuktha in important roles. Ghibran is composing music, PK Varma is handling cinematography, Umesh J Kumar is handling art and Kubendran is editing.

The film shot across Chennai and Pondicherry is slated for a November release.

The makers recently released the first look poster of the film.

Watch the teaser here.

Meanwhile, Harish Kalyan who was last seen in Ispade Rajavum Idhaya Raniyum alongside Shilpa Manjunath in Tamil and in an extended cameo in the Telugu film Jersey starring Nani will next be seen in Tamil in Chimbu Deven‘s Kasada Tabara. This film has six editors, music directors, and cinematographers.

Rebba Monica John who was in Bigil, will next be seen in FIR – Faizal Ibrahim Rais alongside Vishnu Vishal and Mazhaiyil Nanaigiren alongside Anson Paul.

RJ Balaji Launches Podcast; ‘Mind Voice’ Will Stream on Jio Saavn

At a press meet in Chennai, yesterday, RJ Balaji, launched his podcast Mind Voice. The show is being created exclusively for Jio Saavn. Speaking to the press about his new venture, Balaji said, “The former US President said something that really resonated with me, that today’s youth is addicted to anger. It is the only response to the world around them.”

As a content creator, he felt that there was a paucity of online media that focussed on positivity and all the good it can do for you. “With the anger epidemic so prevalent here, I really wanted to do something that was more positive. It will be my take on pertinent issues, and will be delivered in a positive manner,” he said at the launch. Aditya Kasyap, Vice President – Marketing , Jio Saavn is the one who offered Balaji a platform for this show.

One of the major conversations around online content is that of censorship. When asked about it RJ Balaji said, “It’s all about self-censorship. After my radio show got a wider audience, I had to watch what I was saying because I knew children were listening in. I will do the same here too,” he signed off.

Mind Voice will be aired on Jio Saavn, every Wednesday.

Sangathamizhan Review: Yet Another ‘Farmer Film’ Whose Only Redeeming Feature Is Vijay Sethupathi

Cast: Vijay Sethupathi, Soori, Raashi Khanna, Nivetha Pethuraj, Nasser, Ravi Kishan, Sriranjini, Kalloori Vinoth, Sriman, Mime Gopi, Ashutosh Rana

Director: Vijay Chandar

Music Director: VivekMervin

The “agriculture vs mnc” argument is not new to Kollywood and here’s yet another film that follows this formula. We’ve seen enough of these films but there’s honestly nothing to hate about this one. Vijay Sethupathi’s performance and a few quality scenes make the commercial entertainer a bearable watch.

Murugan (Vijay Sethupathi) and Soori (Soori), two aspiring actors, make a deal with a businessman, Shankar (Ravi Kishan) to help him set up a copper factory in Maruthamangalam, a town where Murugan’s doppelganger Tamizh lived. Little does Shankar know that the entire plan was sketched out for him by the entire town. The slow plot could’ve been tightened without too much emphasis on Murugan’s family who had no major role in the narrative. The usual predictable scenes failed to bring about the emotion theyt sought. But one about teenage pregnancy was perfectly delivered by Vijay Sethupathi, leaving a grin on my face.

Raashi Khanna looks great, but doesn’t seem to have improved in performance, at all. We get to see the exact same expressions she had in her debut film, Imaikka Nodigal. Her role doesn’t the plot but she appears throughout the film (as Kamalini) alongside Vijay Sethupathi. Nivetha Pethuraj as Thenmozhi occupies very little screen space but impresses with her performance. The impact of her smaller role is more than Raashi Khanna’s,l despite the difference in screen time.

Vijay Sethupathi excels in the tried-and-tested genre with ease. Some of his dialogues, especially in the beginning, were hard to comprehend, a difficulty I’ve always face in his movies. Though his trademark, the fast delivery did hamper my experience many a time. Soori might well have  the been heroine of the film. He does little to nothing, cracks some stale jokes and hangs around Vijay Sethupathi as the supposed ‘Hero’ just like most heroines in our  recent cinema.

Many supporting artistes who are capable of great performances like Gajaraj, Mime Gopi and John Vijay were criminally under-used. Even though Mime Gopi’s character was meant to be that way, any other artist would’ve fit the role making it a colossal waste of a brilliant performer. The antagonist Ravi Kishan is weak and is not convincing at any point in the film. Ashutosh Rana as Kulandaivel does well as the deuteragonist.

The songs and background score by Vivek-Mervin were outstanding. When there is so much more that can be explored with the visual medium, filmmakers seem to be conveniently clinging to agriculture and misconstrued women empowerment themes. More than anything, it has become a monotonous and lazy means to reach every level of the audience. I only hope this trend dies down soon and filmmakers realise their responsibility is that of telling good stories without boring the audience.

Also, read

‘Action’ Movie Review: Too Much Action, Too Little Plot

Helen Review: An Excellent Survival Drama That Features A Top-Notch Performance From Anna Ben

The Sangathamizhan review is a Silverscreen original article. It was not paid for or commissioned by anyone associated with the film. Silverscreen.in and its writers do not have any commercial relationship with movies that are reviewed on the site.

Maniesh Paul Is The Latest To Join the Frozen 2 Roster

With less than a week to go for the film’s release, Frozen 2 has another name in its roster. TV anchor Maniesh Paul will be dubbing for the movie as Kristoff, Anna’s (voiced by Parineeti Chopra) love interest. Maniesh is famous for his staccato hosting style, with a generous dose of humour.

Speaking to the press, Maniesh Paul said, “Its really overwhelming for me. My daughter is a huge fan of the franchise, and I am so happy to be doing this for her.”

Along with Maniesh, the Hindi version will feature Bollywood superstars Priyanka Chopra Jonas and Parineeti Chopra portraying the characters of Elsa and Anna.

The film is all set to be released in English, Hindi, Tamil and Telugu on 22 November.

Also read, Disney India Ropes In Sisters Priyanka And Parineeti For The Hindi Version Of ‘Frozen 2’

Maadathy – An Unfairy Tale Review: An essential view of an unseeable injustice

Maadathy starts with a rather misleading yet significant scene in which a newly-wed couple is heading to the ‘Maadathy’ temple. The bride holds on to her husband romantically, and ends up smearing some of her vermillion on his shirt. He worries about what the villagers will say if they see it; she argues that they’re married, he has nothing to worry about. The bride asks her husband to stop the bike and goes deep into the bushes, only to realise that she’s started bleeding. Her period is on. Complaining that they haven’t even properly consummated the marriage, her husband walks towards a hut to ask for some cloth that his wife can use. This is perhaps the fourth minute of the film. You do not know what’s going to happen next, but you know you’re about to witness something unnerving. When he doesn’t return, she walks up the plateau to the hut to find a collection of paintings hung on freshly washed white linen. A little boy starts explaining what they mean, scene-by-scene, painting-by-painting. That’s the start of Maadathy – an unfairy tale

“The river stands witness to many injustices, but it flows as usual.” Director Leena Manimekalai’s Maadathy – an unfairy tale, is the story of Yosana, a girl born in the Dalit caste group ‘Puthirai Vannaar’ in the state of Tamil Nadu in India. She belongs to the community of untouchable and unseeable washermen who are enslaved to inherently wash soiled clothes, linen smeared with menstrual blood, and shrouds. They clean, but they’re untouchable. They wash themselves before the light hits the sky, only to wash the dirt off others during the day. 

Yosana belongs to the damned caste, she bathes in the river in the dark so that no one can see her. But, her eyes have sparkling dreams, fantasies about a young man, as she stares at the lines of her palms in the crystal clear water while tadpoles eat off it. Her conversations with her mother are interesting and symbolic. “Don’t you like me? Wasn’t I born to you? Always berating me!” Yosana complains. Her mother says, “They told me to break your neck when you were born…If you keep wandering like this, who will marry you? Tell me? What a curse to be a beautiful girl in this slave caste!” 

Yosana’s mother has to wash the clothes, day after day, hunt, cook and clean and save her beautiful daughter from the evil eyes of sex deprived men who wander around the area with donkeys. Once, her husband is drunk after being made to drink too much alcohol. One of the men pins her down near the bank. She cries for help referring to him as ‘Lord’. She’s raped. Injustice engulfs the village one incident after another, but the river keeps flowing. 

The director symbolically tells the story with the sound of the flowing river, rain water, dew drops and calm waters of the pond in the village. This film is among the only stories ever made on casteism and untouchability that keeps you glued, makes you think, raises your heart rate, yet manages to horrify and emotionally stir you while you almost forget that a little boy is narrating the story he has painted on cloth to a newly married woman who cannot seem to find her husband. 

From the blood to the sound of water, the mud and the inaugural celebration at the Maadathy temple, the production design stands out in almost every second frame. The camerawork by Jeff Dolen, Abhinandhan R, Karthik Muthukumar deserves a special mention. 

By the time you reach the end of this 90 minute long film, you’re exasperated, angry, depressed, yet there’s a sense of relief that in some way, Yosana gets her revenge. Leena showcases frames of the flowing water, upper caste villagers dancing in a brightly lit temple, holy songs playing in the background while simultaneously a heinous crime takes place.

This film stays with you. It’ll be mentioned in the future as a valiant and non-fabricated attempt to capture one tale about the dalits of India.

Yosana’s mother tells her that they’ll cross the river only when they get the news of the death of their relatives. They finally cross the river. Mother, father and daughter when even the clouds must be tired of pouring. The end stands true to the tagline of the film. Nobodies do not have Gods; they are Gods. 

 

Adoor Gopalakrishnan’s Swayamvaram and Aravindan’s Thampu in IFFI New Wave Cinema Retrospective

Three Malayalam feature films are are among the 12 Indian movies that will be screened in a special section dedicated to Indian New Wave Cinema at IFFI (International Film Festival Of India). The eight-day event opens at Panaji, Goa, on 20 November. Malayalam filmmaker Adoor Gopalakrishnan’s Swayamvaram (1972), and G Aravindan’s Thampu (1978) and Utharayanam (1975) will be screened in this section. Filmmaker John Abraham’s Tamil language film Agraharathil Kazhuthai (Donkey in a Brahmin Village) is also part of this section.

Read:IFFI Celebrates Golden Jubilee This Year; International Jury To Be Headed By Ex-Oscar Academy President John Bailey

Swayamvaram, the feature film debut of Adoor, is known as the film that launched a new wave in Malayalam cinema. The film is centred on a newly married couple, played by Sharada and Madhu, who begin their life together without the support of their respective families.

 

The film fetched Sharada her first national award for the best actress. The film won three more national awards that year – Adoor, for direction, Mankada Ravi Varma for cinematography, and the film was named as the best feature film.

Thampu, which stars Nedumudi Venu, Jalaja and Bharath Gopi in major roles, is centred on a circus tent and its inmates. Aravindan won the national award for best direction, and Shaji N Karun the award for best cinematography for Thampu. 

Read: ‘House Owner’ And ‘Oththa Seruppu Size 7’ Officially Selected For IFFI 2019

This year, IFFI is celebrating its Golden Jubilee. The New Wave retrospective opens with the films Ajantrik and Meghe Dhaka Tara by Ritwik Ghatak. Other films featured in the section are Bhuvan Shome by Mrinal Sen, Uski Roti (A Day’s Bread) and Duvidha (In Two Minds) by Mani Kaul, Tarang(Waves) by Kumar Sahani, and Ankur(The Seedling) and Bhumika(The Role) by Shyam Benegal.

The retrospective first played at the Pingyao International Film Festival in China, in October 2019, curated by Marco Mueller, the festival’s artistic director. The programme was co-hosted by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, the National Film Archives of India and the National Film Development Corporation.

Mix Up, Chaos And Laughter; Akshay Kumar And Kareena Kapoor Khan’s ‘Good Newwz’ Trailer Is Here

The trailer of Good Newwz starring Akshay Kumar (as Varun Bhatra), Kareena Kapoor Khan (Deepti Bhatra), Diljit Dosanjh (Honey Bhatra), and Kiara Advani (Monika Bhatra) is here. The film is a comedy of errors about two couples, both called, well, Mr & Mrs Batra. The foursome goes to a fertility clinic, for IVF treatment and that’s where the ‘spam’ as Diljit’s Honey, calls it, gets… mixed up. Chaos ensues. Kareena looks convincing, Akshay has always been good at not-so-politically correct humour, Kiara and Diljit look innocent enough. Adil Hussain is the doctor. The film is about the two couples, navigating this complex maze of parenthood.

The film will release for Christmas this year. Meanwhile the first look of Kareena’s next film with Aamir, set for the next Christmas, Laal Singh Chaddha, also dropped earlier this morning.

Good Newwz is directed by Raj Mehta, produced by Hiroo Yash Johar, Aruna Bhatia, Karan Johar, Apoorva Mehta, Shashank Khaitan, and the story and screenplay is by Jyoti Kapoor.

Meet Aamir Khan’s ‘Laal Singh Chaddha’; Film Set For Christmas 2020 Release

Actor Aamir Khan, introduced his character in the eponymously titled Laal Singh Chadda, to audiences on Twitter this morning. The film is an adaptation of Tom Hanks’ iconic Forrest Gump.

The first look poster of the film, written by Atul Kulkarni, has gone viral on social media already. Laal Singh Chadda is being directed by Advait Chandan (Secret Superstar) and will be produced jointly by Aamir Khan, Kiran Rao and Viacom18 Studios. Aamir Khan plays the role of a Punjabi in the film. The film will feature music by Pritam and lyrics by Amitabh Bhattacharya.

Just last week the actor posted a wish in Punjabi on the occasion of Gurupurab on Twitter.

Recently, Kareena Kapoor Khan’s look in the film was also leaked on social media.

Laal Singh Chaddha is all set for a Christmas 2020 release.

Helen Review: An Excellent Survival Drama That Features A Top-Notch Performance From Anna Ben

Director: Mathukkutty Xavier

Cast: Anna Ben, Lal, Noble Babu Thomas

Spoiler Alert

Helen, directed by Mathukkutty Xavier, is a survival thriller, for the most part. A young woman employed at a fast-food shop is trapped in its cold storage freezer room, one night. When the film isn’t watching her go through different stages of horror and move closer to the edge of life, Helen looks at the many lives she touched, as a daughter, a lover, a kind neighbour or as an acquaintance. The story-telling is seamless and gripping.

Certainly, Helen must not have been an easy film to make. The film is largely shouldered by its characters – their everyday conversations and minor conflicts, and eventually, the unusual situation the protagonist goes through in the latter half of the film. These are law-abiding, lower middle-class people, who don’t want to rebel or plunge into adventures, unless they’re forced to.

Nevertheless, the warm humanism in Xavier’s approach turns them into interesting subjects the audience can thoroughly sympathise with. Helen (Anna Ben), a 25-year-old nurse, is preparing to migrate to Canada. She shares a close bond with her widower father Paul (Lal), although she has a secret that she keeps from him – Azhar (Noble Babu Thomas), her lover.

The writing lets on details about Helen slowly, without being loudly expository. There are affecting little scenes where she admonishes her father for smoking, helps an elderly neighbour take her daily insulin shot, or where she laughs nervously for making mistakes while practising her English. She is effortlessly kind, and has a warm smile. Through the course of the film, we learn about the other side of her personality – resilience and an incredible will to live.

Tension in the narrative escalates subtly, at an interesting pace. You don’t realise the gravity of the situation until a small drop of blood oozes out of her nose, or when all her efforts to turn off the fan inside the freezer end in vain. Xavier structures the latter half of the film like an edgy treasure hunt, dropping minute clues that the search party looking for her pick up one by one.

Xavier fleshes out the sub-characters efficiently to make political and social commentaries. The women in the film have to deal with passive-aggressive misogyny from family members, employers and even strangers on the road. The manager of the fast-food centre uses his employees as a punching bag to vent his frustrations about his personal life. A vile, egoistic policeman (Aju Varghese) becomes a stand-in for many things wrong with our system. At one point, Paul has to choose between his ego and his love for his little girl, and let go of his biases.

Anna Ben, who made her debut through Kumbalangi Nights this year, proves that she is a remarkable talent. She is most natural on screen, underplaying Helen’s effervescent persona in the first half and her desperation to stay alive in the second half. An odd sense of relief flashes on her face when she realises that the mice in the freezer room might be her friend. Anna portrays Helen’s emotional and mental breakdown sensitively, displaying finesse and maturity.

Helen is an interesting, albeit patchy, critique of capitalism and the fast-food industry where human beings are treated like machines. The KFC-like eatery here, takes the shape of a dystopian space that could trap Helen forever. The film ends on a note that places humanity over everything else. When she finds a lighter in her bag, one of the first things that she burns for some heat is her Canadian visa application document. What gets her out of the room is an unassuming act of kindness she used to do everyday. Helen concludes rather beautifully that paying attention to people is all that the world needs to do at the moment, and maybe it’s okay to choose home over ambitions.

This review is a Silverscreen.in original article. It was not paid for or commissioned by anyone associated with the film. Silverscreen.in and its writers do not have any commercial relationship with movies that are reviewed on the site.

Sibiraj’s Next, Walter, Wraps Up Shoot; Dubbing Commences

Sibiraj-Shirin Kanchwala starrer Walter directed by U Anbarasan is a thriller set in the temple town of Kumbakonam. The film entered post production with the shoot wrapping up.

Producer Shruthi Thilak of 11:11 productions said, “The movie’s production has been completeed at a fast pace, I am really thrilled with that.”

The film, reportedly, has a lot of action sequences that needed some attention to detail, but the shoot went as per schedule. Crediting the technical team for its efficacy in this matter, Thilak said, “The artistes and the technicians handled the tough schedule with no hassles.”

The producer also said that the dubbing and post-production will wrap up soon as well. Bankrolled by Shruthi Thilak for 11:11 Productions, Walter is an action thriller that has Sibiraj playing the role of a police officer. Shirin Kanchwala will be seen playing the female lead, Samuthirakani, Sanam Shetty, Riythvika and few more actors  are playing important characters in the film.

‘Action’ Movie Review: Too Much Action, Too Little Plot

Cast: Vishal, Tamannaah, Ramki, Chaya Singh, Yogi Babu, Aishwarya Lekshmi, Akansha Puri, Kabir Duhan Singh, Vincent Ashokan

Director: Sundar C

Music Director: Hiphop Tamizha Aadhi

Watch a long ‘Mountain Dew’ TV commercial and you’ll get an idea of what the latest Vishal starrer is like. The film could have easily been called Action Overdose, because there was nothing in the movie that could be termed plausible.

Let us also not forget the director’s penchant for objectifying the female leads — this film is another feather in that repulsive cap.

A Pakistan-based terror plot to assassinate the Chief Minister’s son and political heir apparent (Ramki) is successful, and what follows is the brother’s (Vishal as Subash) revenge. He takes the help of his army coursemate, Dia (played by Tamannaah).

The incredibly long narrative, filled with expected twists in the tale, bores you completely. Only the action sequences and Yogi Babu’s performance as ‘Crack’ Jack garners some laughs.

I tried to find some redeeming features in the movie, but came up short. The dialogues by Badri were stale and commonplace, not to mention the really unbearable English lines.

Unnecessary songs at important instances, with heroines adorned in skimpy clothes are key elements of all Sundar C movies. The director believes that these are for the masses, but some movie goers actually dread these songs, sir.

Despite the many flaws in the film, and just how terribly the heroines are used in the song sequences, in the actual film itself, they have a part to play. Vishal and Tamannaah make the film bearable with their performances, while Akansha goes over the top in many instances.

Super Deluxe fame Ashwanth has a disappointing outing here. Chaya Singh was quite good in her role as the widow.

The dubbing engineer has worked the most among all of the technicians in the film. He has managed to fill up the film with as many dialogues as possible, but sadly this doesn’t make Action any better.

The VFX and CG department needed to stepped up their game. The more-than-obvious effects in the film were quite grating. The background score by Hiphop Tamizha Aadhi helps the film a lot, though he follows the tried-and-tested formula for all the songs.

Watch the Action trailer here:

This review is a Silverscreen original article. It was not paid for or commissioned by anyone associated with the film. Silverscreen.in and its writers do not have any commercial relationship with movies that are reviewed on the site.

Jack Daniel Review: Dileep Hams Up In This Lazy, Cliche-Ridden Drama

Director: SL Puram Jayasurya

Cast: Dileep, Arjun, Anju Kurian

*Spoiler Ahead*

As the year  comes to an end, the contest for the most bizarre Malayalam film of the year just got interesting! In Jack Daniel, writer-director SL Puram Jayasurya makes bank/museum robbery look like the easiest job in the world. Jack (played by Dileep), a millionaire criminal , walks into high-security spaces wearing obvious and bad disguises, and walks out with haul worth billions of rupees.

This movie makes pick-pocketing look difficult. Jack is lucky because the policemen he has to deal with are empty-headed buffoons who shouldn’t be allowed anywhere near a police station. Daniel, who is the the “sophisticated” sleuth tasked with nabbing Jack (Arjun, who looks more ramp ready than investigation ready) is not much of an improvement on the cops.

The biggest issue here is that the movie isn’t even trying to be credible. There is nothing new or interesting in the treatment of the concept.  It is equal parts bad video game, and a bad collage of mediocre Indian movies in the genre, like Robinhood, Crazy Gopalan, Dhoom and Race.

The director could care less about logic, cohesiveness, or even details and that is apparent  throughout. For instance, in one of the scenes, the entire state cabinet, including the chief minister, are seen hiding in a room behind a godown to collect their share of black-money kickback.

The plot tropes are archaic. In what comes as no surprise to anyone, the mysterious young girl the hero dates is an undercover police officer. The climactic showdown between the hero and his nemesis makes the girl realise she truly cares for the hero. And it goes on!

The protagonist, Jack and Daniel, are like two peas in a pod, like their names. They are dramatic, and like to deliver punch dialogues before signing off from action scenes. Also, they fight the same enemy – politicians who are the root cause of the country’s black money problem.

With better writing, the two leads fighting the same evil would have had a far better interplay than what we have to deal with here. In Jack Daniel, they are mere show pieces whose combination scenes are the blandest in the film. They rarely meet, and when they do, they stare into each other’s eyes and exchange instantly forgettable lines. The film fails to make this interaction interesting.

The lackadaisical approach extends to the background score as well, with composer Gopi Sundar’s score jarring at places. The romantic track is not helped by the fact that the female lead is nearly three decades Dileep’s junior!

In what has become typical of the films being made recently, the filmmakers resort to national pride and love for the armed forces as a way to salvage the movie. The second half is dedicated to promoting an NGO that helps soldiers and their families. In the Jack Daniel universe; this  thoughtlessness comes as no surprise, though.

Watch the Jack Daniel Trailer here:

This review is a Silverscreen.in original article. It was not paid for or commissioned by anyone associated with the film. Silverscreen.in and its writers do not have any commercial relationship with movies that are reviewed on the site.

Thambi Teaser Starring Karthi Sivakumar, Jyothika

Cast
KARTHI, JYOTIKA, SATHYARAJ, NIKHILA VIMAL, ILAVARASU

DOP : R.DRajasekar ISC
Music : GovindVasantha
Story : Rensild’silva,Sameer Arora
Screenplay : Rensild’silva, Sameer Arora, Jeethu Joseph
Additional Screenplay & Dialouge : K. Manikandan
Editor : VS Vinayak
Art Director : PremNavas
Costume Designer : PoornimaRamasamy
Sound Design : Justin Jose,Cas
Action Director :Stunt Silva
Choreographers : Prasanna Sujith,Shobi
Lyrics : KarthikNetha,Vivek
Di : Accel Media
Vfx : Tony Magmyth
Cheif Co – Director : SA. Baskaran,Sudheesh Ramachandran
Visual Promotions : Trigger Happy
Publicity Design : Ma-Th
Pro : Johnson
Produced By : VIACOM18 STUDIOS & SURAJ SADANAH

Jada Trailer Starring Kathir, Yogi Babu

Starring: Kathir, Roshini Prakash, Sreedhar A.P, Yogi Babu, Kishore, Gowtham Selvaraj, Swathishta, Arun Alexander, Lijesh, Arun Prasad, Aruvi Bala, Nishanth, Shanmugam, Raj, Kulothungan
Directed: Kumaran .A
Music: Sam C.S
DOP: A.R. Sooriya
Editor: Richard Kevin A
Art Director: Srikanth Gopal
Stunts: Vimal Rambo
Sound: SYNC Cinemas
Produced by The Poet Studios
Audio Label: Think Music

Redrum Teaser Starring Ashok Selvan, Samyuktha Hornad

Producer – Sundar Annamalai
Written & Directed by Vikram Shreedharan
DOP – Kugan S Palani
Music – Vishal Chandrashekhar
Art – Gopi Anand
Editor – Prasanna GK
Costume Designer -Meenakshi Shreedharan
Stunt – Miracle Michael
Lyrics – Navin B
Sound Design – C Sethu
Executive Producer – K Sathish Kumar
Designer – Gautham J
VFX – Aksha Studios
DI – Accel Media
PRO – Nikkil Murukan
Starring – Ashok Selvan, Samyukta Hornad, Madhumathi, Deepak, Sharath, John
Mahendran, Nishanth
Produced by Time Line Cinemas