Tuesday, September 11, 2001

Pandavar Bhoomi

Film Review: Pandavar Bhoomi

WHEN WAS the last time one saw a film that made you want to rub your hands and cheer everyone associated with it? How long ago did one watch a film that made you feel there is still hope for Tamil cinema? It is time again for such reactions now. Inundated with talent from every quarter, comes Media Dreams' ``Pandavar Bhoomi''.

Strongstoryline, neat screenplay, clear characterisation, powerful dialogue and slick, confident direction - the new package from Cheran who is responsible for all the above, has all these and much more.

``PandavarBhoomi'' in keeping with the current trend, is again a story of brothers and sisters, love and jealousy, sentiment and sadness. But all these are strongly melded with incidents that unfold in an interesting manner.

A family of three brothers and a sister, (Raj Kiran, Chandrasekar, Ranjit and Kavitha) is forced to leave the native village after murders and mayhem.

Theyreturn after 12 years to re-establish links with their roots. The dilapidated house is demolished and constructed aesthetically all over again, thanks to civil engineer, Thamizharasan (Arun). Thamizharasan falls in love with Jeeva (Shamita) in the family. But initially conditions are not conducive enough for the romance to culminate in marriage.

The story has filial love but nobody goes overboard. It has brotherly attachment and sisterly affection, again within believable limits. There are young lovers but they are practical enough to accept both joy and disappointment without much ado.

Arun is one actor who has always done justice to the roles he plays. Here again as the hero Thamizharasan his emotions and expressions fill the bill perfectly. He is graceful in dance and effective in stunts. In is a pity that this talented young man gets opportunities so few and far between. Probably ``Pandavar Bhoomi'' will change all that.

Raj Kiran's subdued portrayal as the eldest brother is electrifying. There is no melodrama or over-acting even under the most trying of circumstances - such as the mother's death and the sister's murder.

The surprise packet, however, is the performance of Ranjit. He makes best use of the scene that revolves round him and makes the viewer's eyes moist. A superb cameo!

New find Shamita breaks the myth that looks alone matter for a heroine. With a simple, girl-next-door appearance she impresses with her natural essay, as Jeeva.

The scenes involving the carpenter and the labourers at the construction site are enjoyable. Charlie is at home in these sequences and so is Ilavarasu who earlier made a mark in Cheran's "Porkaalam". The dialogue is a striking aspect of the light scenes too.

Bharadwaj's music, especially in the background, is laudable. And so are the bewitching locations as seen through the lens of Thankar Bachchan.Negative aspects there are, like the juvenile symbolism of a vulture swooping down when the villain enters the scene, the villain entering his house and howling on seeing his father dead when the police is looking out for him right outside, and of course Vijayakumar's weird wig!

Yet ``Pandavar Bhoomi'' has to be welcomed, with open arms because decent, meaningful cinema deserves encouragement.

Review from "The Hindu"

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Tuesday, September 04, 2001

Aalavandhaan

Stars: Kamal Hassan, Raveena Tandon, Manisha Koirala
Music: Shankar Mahadevan-Ehsaan-Loy
Director: Suresh Krishna

THE TECHNICAL brilliance of V Creations's "Aalavandhaan" (A) leaves you zapped. The histrionism of this wizard called Kamal Hassan bowls you over. And the diligence and industriousness of the crew is only too evident in every frame.

It is another feather in the cap for director Suresh Krishna. Kamal and Suresh Krishna who had made impressive impressions in the past with films like "Sathya" and "Indran Chandran" come together again to create a milestone in Tamil cinema.

It is Kamal Hassan's story, screenplay and dialogue and is thus a Kamal show in more ways than one.

Nandu and Vijay (Kamal Hassan) are twins. The latter is soft, rational and level-headed, while Nandu is reckless, impulsive and intolerant. Vijay grows up to be a commando while Nandu develops schizophrenic tendencies and lands up in an asylum for the mentally ill — after killing their step mom (Kitu Gidwani), a termagant. All hell is let loose once Nandu escapes from the asylum. It is mayhem and murder, as he turns a misogynist and targets Vijay's wife Tejaswini (Raveena Tandon) who, he believes, is the re-incarnation of his dead step-mom.

When there is a string of murders to be shown, things could turn gory and unpalatable. The 2D animation cleverly used in these scenes, reduces the bloody effect. Computer graphics (TIL Studios) ingeniously blend with the live shots and reveal a new scientific dimension of Indian film-making.

Vairamuthu's lyrics are again fine examples of his imagination and expertise. The words and composition of "Azhagukku Thai... " number will be remembered for long. Shankar Mahadevan-Ehsaan-Loy trio have created mood pieces in music that suit the situations perfectly.

Kamal's performance needs no eulogy. But that eyes alone can convey every minute expression from agony, desperation and yearning (for the mother) to hatred lust and serenity, is tellingly proved by the versatile actor. If at the end of it all your heart goes out to Nandu, it is Kamal's victory all over again.

Manisha Koirala (in a special appearance) and Raveena Tandon are apt. Youthfulness seems to have bade goodbye to Raveena, particularly in the close-up shots. Sarath Babu, who once played the parallel hero's role with Kamal, is his father-in-law in "Aalavandhaan"!

When the brothers fight in the climax the aim is to kill, but again too suddenly Vijay does not want the brother to die! Anyway, the end is no suspense.

In the case of "Aalavandhan,' the hype and hoopla built up for months seems justified — to a certain extent.

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