Showing posts with label Mohanlal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mohanlal. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 18, 2018

Odiyan

ODIYAN. The expectation was that big. And the hype went on and on so that people expected the moon. That is the problem and the reason probably why there was so much of badmouthing happening.
Odiyan is actually an okay movie. Honestly. Made in the conventional mould, director Shrikumar Menon, an adman, is a debutant in the feature film category. Given that, the opening scenes are riveting.
 Odiyan stories abound, in the Malabar region and this is but one story of perhaps the last Odiyan. Unlike ghost and yakshi stories, the Odiyan was real and people knew who it was. But when and how he would strike was the surprise that people dreaded. The equivalent of a modern day goonda. At night, in the dim light of a coconut palmleaf torch, the Odiyan, who came dressed in oxen garb or any other animal, could literally spring a surprise and frighten a man into a faint or cause him to fall and hurt himself. That was all that an Odiyan did. Now that's the background of the story.
Mohanlal, the Odiyan, (Odiyan Manickan) is huge, supple and has made many enemies in the village. His role is larger than life and he lives up to it. The emotional scenes do connect with the viewer, trolls notwithstanding. He makes the fights convincing. The climax is another story altogether.   Only the dialect that Mohanlal speaks sticks out like a sore thumb. There is nothing North Kerala or Palakkadan in his speech. It is Mohanlal talking. That could have been corrected at least while dubbing. The other characters like Siddique speak a differrent dialect. He is very good.  Manju Warrier's dialogues too are not true to the region.
The crass villain is played by Prakash Raj in his usual style.  
 Through a series of flashbacks the story of Odiyan Manickan's life unfolds, of how he had no choice but to inherit the profession of his forbears, coaxed by his grandfather, played ably by Manoj Joshi. Some of the villagers, conventional all black or all white characters make the story happen. Of them Manju Warrier is the best. Sparks of her performances in Kannezhuthi Pottum thottu or Kanmadam are visible. Background music is very good.
The climax is....well...unpredictably botched up.
 Mohanlal fans will love it. Others can see it for its traditional folklore content.

Sunday, March 29, 2015

Ennum Eppozhum average

Sathyan Anthikkad+Mohanlal+Manju Warrier. What do you expect? Fireworks? But this one was a dampener. Average is the best description for Ennum eppozhum. And that average grade goes largely for the one wonderful classical verging on semi-classical dance performance by Manju Warrier.
A better script by Ranjan Pramod may have helped. The story by Raveendran also has too many sub plots which distract you instead of contributing to the overall good of the movie.Nowhere do you really laugh your heart out. Like Priyadarshan's, has Sathyan Anthikkad's  bag of tricks been exhausted? The situations are contrived and coincidences galore, like the hera and heroine accidentally meet at all the right places for the story to proceed. Come on, the audience has grown up! They don't swallow things as they did four decades ago any more.
Renji Panikkar's character was not delineated well enough. A villain who was later turned into a buffoon when two plus hours of the movie got over to avoid a loose end? Every other character was a hangover of old Sathyan movies. Manju Warrier did try hard enough and so did Mohan Lal.  Lena came out well, in fact, natural. The songs just did not stay in the mind. That something which the audience longed for and expected just wasn't there. The magic that Aaraam Thamburaan and Kanmadam gave us with these two will always be remembered. You can't club this movie with those. But curiosity will kill the cat and the combo works. An opportunity that has not been exploited.
Prema Manmadhan

Friday, July 10, 2009

Bhramaram Review

Al last, Malayalam movies are getting out of the rut. Am so glad. Bhramaram is yet another different movie that has hit the cinemas. It falls into different genres actually: thriller, sentimental, topical, cerebral and family movie, or all of these. The work of the entire team has brought out a mind blowing result:The camera (Ajayan Vincent who is Jayanan Vincent's brother and son of veteran Vincent), acting (Mohanlal, Suresh Menon, Muralikrishnan, in that order), apt sound (Mohan Sithara) and the suthradhar of it all, Blessy (bless him for thinking out of the box and working towards realisation of his visualisation) He says two cameramen declined when they saw the locales, rough terrain in the high ranges of Kerala. The city shots have novelty written all over them. Blessy has exploited up to 60 per cent of Mohanlal's talent. So far he has brought out hardly 45 per cent, I believe. Jayanan Vincent's camera makes you sit on the edge of your seat. Only at the end of the movie do you realise the meaning of the title. Flaws there are, but very very few. Year 2009 will be a landmark year for Malayalam cinema. Would that more and more directors think out of the formula.