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Itihri Nerum, Roshan Mathew, Nandhu Anchor A  Brilliant Road Movie

Ithri Nerum

Itihri Nerum, Roshan Mathew, Nandhu Anchor A  Brilliant Road Movie

Rating: *** ½

  Ithri Nerum, which means ‘A Little While’ lingers in one’s  memory for than …well, a  little  while. It is sharp-witted  and, like  a lot of Malayalam  movies, not afraid of silences. And when  the silences  do occur, they  are suffused with  flute passages  which float ethereally across the  Thiruvananthapuram landscape conjuring a stirring synthesis  of  ‘now’ and ‘zen’.

  I often wonder how Malayalam cinema conceives the stories and screenplays that  it  so audaciously does time after time. In Ithri Nerum the protagonist Anish(Roshan Mathew,  once again proving himself to be of the  most  unobtrusively  skilled  actors of these times) is  a podcaster whose marriage  has “something missing”.

At  least this is  what he tells his former girlfriend Anjana(Zarin Shihab) when she suddenly calls him to  announce  she is in  town,while he is on the way to a stag party in a hotel  room with two of his  colleagues on the eve  of his baby’s baptism.He diverts  to the public library  to  meet her. We  never see the library. The budgets, like the emotions in the  screenplay, are curbed.

 The  evening feels like a  baptism of some sort for  Anish, as he  reconnects with Anjana,and then….well, the rest of the film turns out to be as unexpected  for us  as  it does for the  characters.

 But here is  the thing: the understated subtle yet mordant screenplay(by  Vishak Shakti)  takes both  us  and the  characters  for a rich rewarding unforeseen—for all concerned– ride . This is  a tricky terrain , ridden with  potholes  and  U-turns(in a manner  of speaking) that could  quickly convert the  amusing, faintly alarming, dwindled-down drama into a  farce.

  Debutant  director Prasanth  Vijay negotiates  through the snarls with endearing ease and fluency. Most of  the plot is on the road with Aneesh  and Anjana occupying the  backseat while  Aneesh’s colleagues Rajan(Nandhu) and  Chanchal(Anand Manmadhan) taking the front seats, not  only literally but also in other ways.

Both the ‘supporting’ actors, especially Nandhu are natural-born scene-stealers. Their  characters’ grow from  two mildly interested bystanders  to genuinely  concerned  participants  in the crisis on hand.The two actors sink their teeth  into their  respective roles  with an unassuming diligence.

   The crisis, if you must know, is a sloshy  Anjana  who drinks the  entire evening with Anish, claims she knows how to hold her drink , and then passes out.I really  didn’t like Anjana much. She is , in one  word,trouble.And  also a bit of  an intruder. What  follows is  an night to remember  with moments and episodes that stay  with us in spite of  the narrative’s irksome tendency to  straggle  when  we expect it  to  trot.

  Flaws, which make life worth living,  garnish  the  narrative , reminding us  that perfection in  human beings is  as  boring as in cinema. Each  of the four  protagonists in Ithri Nerum are  blemished  characters and aware  of their shortcomings. Their ride together  from  Thiruvananthapuram to Kanyakumari  through the night is  reflective , introspective  and  revealing.  I won’t say entertaining. For that  we can always turn  to the next David Dhawan  film.

Watch out for  filmmaker  Jeo Baby as an autodriver who doesn’t know how to handle the  drunken couple in his  vehicle. Fortunately,  director  Prasanth Vijay does.

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