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Su From So Rewrites All The  Rules  Of Comedy

Su From So

Su From  So Rewrites All The  Rules  Of  Comedy

Rating: ***

Kannada cinema seems  to be heading the  Kerala way.  Malayalam cinema  was so far regarded as  the  hub of  creativity. No longer so. Films from  Karnataka  have lately been fetching themselves bonus points for  originality  and excellence.

  Debutant  director  J. P. Thuminad’s Su From So gets  points for originality. I am not too sure about the excellence. Though leaden  with  quirky characters who  are either  seen drinking or gossiping , or both, the plot is  paper-thin and unhumorous  beyond a  point .

 When  the  proceedings   stretch themselves  to   more than two hours of  faffing,one feels progressively  less  inclined to laughing.

 Set in small coastal  village(apparently in the South people living by sea are often at sea) the hectic drama of drollery and  raillery  begins when  a  young man Ashoka(played by the writer-director J P Thuminad) is  caught peeping at a woman bathing(heroes are no longer allergic to perversions). To  save his reputation Ashoka pretends to be possessed  by the ghost of a   woman named Sulochana.

 That’s it! That one  SOS move  trigger off  a chain of  uncontrollable  bacchanalia, some amusing,  the other so overdone it feels like  an overcooked meal. With lots of free booze, of course.The  gurgle  and guzzle of  a  village of idle chatterers  begin to get annoying after  a point.

The satire  on the  supernatural  starts on a promising  note, but soon gets  repetitive  and  self-contradictory. What  starts  off as  a professed  critique  on  blind faith eventually settles down to celebrating spirits rather than shooing them off.

The  entire spiral of the  plot is in conflict with the basic  contemplated  premise  of  belittling the  concept of ghosts and  other supernatural entities. We  can condone the contradictions  by keeping in mind that the comic genre allows  limitless  liberties.

However the film’s underlying tone  secretes  serious  concerns  like domestic  abuse  and  the  way  single women especially widows ,are looked on as easy prey  by  men in  rural India.

Somewhere in the  prevalent chaos Su From So(the title  refers  to the  spirit Sulochana who is from  a place called  Someshwara)   forfeits its claims to being a relevant  comment on blind faith by succumbing to   pressures  of mass entertainment ,quite  like the  characters who seem  hopelessly trapped in a time warp  of superstitions  and  ghosts, all fuelled by the  endless drinking.

 A major  obstacle  in  Su From So  obtaining the creative freedom it seeks  are the  characters who keep pouring into the plot , unchecked. Some like  Ravi Anna (Shaneel Gautham ), the  village’s sensible do-gooder, hold their own in spite of  the slippery  ground. Other characters are  not that  lucky.

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