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Bison Kaalamaadan Is Applause Entertainment’s  Own Chariots  Of  Fire

Bison Kaalamaadan

There  is no easy way to say this. In Mali Selvaraj’s Bison Kaalamaadan , now  streaming on Netflix, young Dhruv Vikram proves himself as good  an actor  as his  father Vikram; which is  really saying a lot.

Rating: ****

I watched the young actor disappear  into  his character in the way  Kamal Haasan did in his earlier films (before he  became a  parody of himself) or the  way Daniel Day Lewis did in  My Left Foot, and  Matthew McConaughey did  in Dallas Buyers Club.

Full marks to the  producer Sameer Nair  for  recognizing the spark in the  young actor after his botched  up  debut in Aditya Varma.As  a  Kabaddi player struggling with caste  and financial  hurdles, Dhruv proves himself one of  the finest actors  of the new  generation ,  far ahead  of  his  hyped competitors  from  Hindi cinema. Providentially , Dhruv gets  abundant  support  from  Mari Selvraj’s   screenplay which is taut and rugged, and yet soft and supple when the need arises.

It is  also an extremely  violent  film, not  just  physical but emotional. When the mind is  pushed into dark spaces  it  revolts,and explodes.

 Most of all, the tone  of  narration is non-judgemental  even in the  most brutal of  circumstances. Interestingly the rigours  of the game of   Kabbaddi resonate with  the  tone of narration and the  temperament of the  protagonist.

Dhruv  Vikram plays Kittan Velusamy as a creature of the dark  who won’t allow himself to be swallowed by the  darkness that has been bequeathed to him.  He is  a ‘backward’ who will move forward  , come what may.The visuals during the game and outside the field suggest a  coalition between destiny and self-actualization.

Unlike other celluloid sports legends like Rocky Balboa and  Jake LaMotta(Raging Bull), Kittan Velusamy’s commonness is his greatest  strength. He won’t be struck down  by negative forces which  assail him  on every  raging step that he takes.

   Though laden with a  looming ferociousness, the storytelling is   never over-burdened  with  plotting  prevarication. There is  a  magnetic clarity of intent in the  storytelling.

The  protagonist may be  an underdog.  But he is  never caught in a dim  light.

 Dhruv gets  a bevy of  supportive actors  to  make his onscreen  journey a resounding success.  Pasupathy  as Kittan’s father and Azhagam Perumal as his  coach are all things visceral . And yes, the women are not sidelined  even though the sport  and  its ramifications  are  rightly treated as  masculine entities. There is  a  palpable bonding between Dhruv  and  the two women in his life   played by Anupama Parameswaran and Rajisha Vijayan, both  older and,yes,wiser.

   To  define Bison Kaalamaadan as a sports  film would be  absurdly  literal.  This  is  a work of  multi-faceted  splendour, a  mirror to  a society that still arms the  strong and  weakens the weak.

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