Movie: Enakku Vaaitha Adimaigal
Language: Tamil
Cast: Jai, Pranitha, Karunakaran
Trailer:
Review:
The plot fixates on four companions. Cheerful and ecstatic, it's what happens when one of them, the saint, goes into dejection and the companions attempt to get him back to commonality. The film keeps up an enduring pace all through, with each of the four getting practically equivalent space on screen. Happy and windy in its treatment, the look of the film, in any case, appears to overwhelm its substance.
It opens with pictures on screen of celebrated around the world fellowships like those of Castro-Guevara, Kamal-Rajini and some more. This is trailed by a vivacious melody move number, a tribute to companionship. We are then quickly acquainted with the lead characters of the plot. Krishna an IT proficient (Jai) ;Ramesh a bank clerk (Karunakaran), Basha an auto driver (Kali Venkat); and Sowmi (Naveen) a call focus worker. It's from Krishna's excursion to a specialist (Ramaiah) and his portrayal of the past, that we become acquainted with about his fizzled relationship with Divya (Pranitha), a young lady he had met on an outing to a slope station. The regular slices to the past here could have been kept away from.
The backstory takes us to Kodaikanal, the lavish slope station caught stunningly by the camera (Mahesh Muthuswamy). Truth be told its choice cinematography is the film's key quality. Krishna had succumbed to Divya and she had appeared to respond. Yet, her sudden removing from him had driven him into a condition of gloom, Krishna notwithstanding thinking about suicide.
The portrayal peps up to a degree when Rajendran enters the scene and creates additional turmoil in the lives of the companions. The finale is played at a healing facility where the companions arrive up, and Krishna pointing the finger at himself for their situation, tries to patch wall. Anjali shows up in a cameo, and it's an 'all's well that finishes well' finale.
The discourse is bound with shining jokes which to a degree figures out how to keep the portrayal vivacious. The performers are satisfactory in their parts, the script not requesting a lot of showmanship. A promising work of a debutant producer, the film could have finished with more punch and bubble.
Rating: 3.5/5
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