Exclusive Premium Content

Thalaivan Thalaivii, Noisy, Chaotic, Anarchic & Annoying

Thalaivan Thalaivii, Noisy,  Chaotic, Anarchic &  Annoying

Rating: **

This  Tamil  typhoon-drama is  a high-decibel catastrophe. Everyone screams fights  and  abuses throughout the lengthy tedious tortuous  film,edited  like  an extended reel on the phone.

And  all of this in the name of a rural “realistic” family drama  featuring two of the most talented  lead players of the South. Both Nithya Menen and  Vijay Sethupathi have the stamp  of quality  embedded on their career. How did they  get conned into being part of this hideous  headbanger?If you are  sensitive  to noise pollution, avoid this at  all costs. It will  scar your nerves and wound  your eardrums for a lifetime.

Every character  speaks his lines as though the world is hard of hearing. Vijay and Nithya—we forgive you for this  combined  trespass—play  Aagasaveeran and  Perarasi  the  poster-couple  for  abolishing the  institution  of  marriage .They abuse and  hit at  each other  like Tom and Jerry.

Sadly  the two actors, usually so  inviting, are no fun to watch.Their  attempt to  make light of  the  ludicrous plot is embarrassing.

I never  got the chance to master their names’ pronunciation. The non-porous  pacing of  the  storytelling , the  near-suffocating  ambience—almost like  a  two-hour long trailer–allows no room  for any  kind of  ponderous  peregrination .

It’s like being in one  bullfight  after  another: yes, that awful!Or maybe worse: like stepping into cowdung repeatedly.

Making the experience  even more alienating is  the non-linear  movement  of the plot  with one  common thread: Aagasaveeran   and Perarasi  are  constantly fighting while their  respective families add fuel  to the  fire by butting  into the  couple’s quarrels like  chorus  singers  in a choir of cacophony  .

Initially  their wedding is  called off when Perarasi’s  brother   Porchelvan( R K  Suresh)  discovers  that  Aagasveeran  and his  family  have  a  criminal past. But the couple  doesn’t  give  a damn as  to what their families think  of  the alliance. They just want to be together  even  if they have to kill one  another to stop their families from  doing the same.

The  problem here is the deflection of marital  passion into  a free-for-all. There is  an incessant flow of  verbal and physical abuse between the couple.Normalizing abuse seems the  director’s  task on hand The couple’s   mutual  hostility extends  into their  families who squabble  ferociously.

Director  Pandiraj treats  the  marital theme with  a virulent animosity that spreads its venom  towards  an  the  institution  of  marriage.As  a couple  who can’t stay together and can’t live apart Vijay Sethupathi and Nithya Menen are loud and  hammy, especially the latter whose vaudeville performance  gave  me the heebie-jeebies. It is terrifying  how  awkward  a  good actor can be when performing in  a  bad script. Not everyone is Sridevi.

 

Comments

Most Popular

To Top