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Uppu Kappurambu Comedy As  A Grave Matter

Rating: ***

Amazon’s Uppu Kappurambu is  a hard  nut to crack.This dark droll comedy has the petite  Keerthy Suresh attempting physical  comedy  for the  first time.

And it’s a sight  for our  eyes.  Keerthy flails her fragile limbs, shakes her  midriff and dances  like  Govinda  with a sprained  ankle.She is Apoorva, the head sarpanch  of the  village  which is  about to run out of grave spots  for  the dead.

Dig that? Now comes the clincher. Apoorva who keeps getting tips from her dead dad(he too behaves like he has  just seen a  ghost)   on how  to run a village  filled with seething dimwits who make  so many faces in the camera,it feels  like  a satire for the highschool  of  the specially  abled.

To extract humour out of death is not  an easy task. Comedy is a  grave matter in this  original but frequently over-underlined film.  Director  Ani. I.V. Sasi has little  patience  with  sensible  amusement. The humour here is so hectic, it feels  like  a  scramble to the  finish line  with  every  character behaving  as if on parole from  a mental institution.

 Keerthy Reddy is interesting in  a fusion of  Chaplin  and Yogi Babu. She  abandons her habitual daintiness with  uneven results. However she remains interesting in her quirky avatar to the end. If there is one reason to watch  this film, it’s the leading actress.

 Suhas as the village  grave digger  tries hard to infuse his sketchy part with a semblance of pathos. Regrettably the writing is insulated from all emotions except the droll. Suhas’ rapport with his  immediate  co-star Keerthy  is  scripturally  distanced.

 So it remains  throughout the film. Keerthy and Suhas behave  like two  utterly unrelated  souls trying to  find a common  ground in a  situation way  out of their hands.There is more kinship between Chinna  and his  mom(Rameshwari, delightful)  than between Chinna and Apoorva.

  There is  a  joke   about  Apoorva  being offered the only chair  in Chinna’s  shack which won’t open as  it is never used. It is  funnier than any of the repetitive  graveside  jokes.

When  Chinna tries to explain  his old school ties with Apporva she  yawns  in his face. Luckily  the audience never comes to that. The  zest for the zany carries us from one outrageous situation  to  another. This  may not be the  best of black comedies. But there is something to  be said about a  satire where Keerthy Suresh blows her nose so hard  at  a burial that the  other attendees cringe in disgust.

 The actress is not afraid to make  a  spectacle of  herself. And we are  all  for her fearless spirit.The  film, with all its  lampoonish antics  never feels real. The comedy never feels organic. The  characters are remarkably rudderless, trying hard  to find a sense of belonging in  a film that leaves them to their own devices.

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