The newest Tamil four-part anthology Victim is directed by Venkat Prabhu, PA Ranjith, Chimbudevan and Rajesh. Streaming on SonyLiv, just one a part of this anthology really works. And it really works so effectively that every thing else pales compared.
Dhammam
Director Pa.Ranjith’s film has a bust of Buddha proper in the course of sprawling farmland. It looks like a lazy afternoon, as a farmer Guna, performed by Guru Somasundaram, is irrigating his piece of land. He’s tolling away underneath the solar diligently as his lone daughter tries to amuse herself with every thing she will be able to discover within the area. She climbs up on the burst, sits across the shoulders of Buddha, and tries to fly. And that sight angered her father. “Get down from the god,” he orders. The daughter Kema is not any pushover. “Daddy, Buddha has mentioned there isn’t any God and also you calling him one? she shouts again, rolling her eyes at her father.
Her father is not any mom and takes his non secular classes from her. he walks right down to her and tries to make her step down from the Buddha. And Ranjith pulls away a large shot permitting us to see this lovely set towards the luxurious inexperienced area. Kima is taking part in on the shoulders of Buddha like a butterfly and her father standing subsequent to her. There’s numerous innocence and serenity within the scene. And all these issues had been about to come back aside with the arrival of a bitter man Shekar, performed by Kalaiyarasan. He appears to nurture a deep-rooted grudge towards Kema and Guna. A trivial difficulty quickly spirals uncontrolled. One factor results in one other factor, in an ensuing fist combat between the 2 adults, Shekar will get his throat minimize. It’s an accident and Guna has nothing to with it. But, Shekar’s household just isn’t able to purpose with Guna. They are blinded by hate and rage and rush to the spot to not save Shekar’s life however to take Guna’s. In the following acts of pure insanity, Ranjith captures the default nature of the human situation to lash out and pile on extra destruction, with none rationality, which is a pivotal level, when people flip into irrational animals.
Mirrange
Confession poster.
Filmmaker M. Rajesh has referred to as his movie a thriller. But, what he finally ends up giving us is a horror present, with no actual worth in it. A Bengaluru-based techie travels to Chennai as a part of her official responsibility. Her firm has offered her with an unbiased home on the outskirts of Chennai. And the property she goes to remain in has a bitter historical past. Just six months in the past, the housekeeper’s complete household, barring him, died by suicide by setting themselves on fireplace. And what follows for the subsequent 20 minutes is a mediocre present that makes Rajesh, who’s the director of some hits, appear like an novice. The film is clumsy and it’s very robust to make any sense of what’s taking place in it. When a director feels there’s a have to put a prolonged message on the finish of the climax to clarify what occurred, it’s clear signal of a failure.
Kottai Pakku Vathalum..Mottai Maadi Sitharum!
Kottai Pakku Vathalum..Mottai Maadi Sitharum! poster.
Director Chimbudevan’s is a fantasy film or so we expect. Set towards the backdrop of Covid lockdown, a reporter finds himself on the finish of his tether. If he can’t give an attention-grabbing story to his journal, he might effectively kiss goodbye to his job. So in some lockdown delirium, he believes that grinding a number of betel nuts will make a non secular guru, who’s allegedly 400 years outdated, come knocking on his door. Desperate instances, proper? Even after we give such an enormous leeway to the filmmakers, he fails to make something work. All we get is the broad strokes of how dangerous people are when in comparison with all different residing creatures within the universe. Chimbudevan hasn’t even made an effort to again up his narrative with some philosophy. It’s only a bunch of lazy rehashes of the knowledge of a simpleton. Even the presence of Nasser and Thambi Ramaiah fails to make this higher.
Confession
Confession poster.
Filmmaker Venkat Prabhu’s film appears to be impressed by a hostage drama. The movie might remind the viewers of director Joel Schumacher’s 2002 thriller Phone Booth. But in contrast to that movie, Confession does little to attract us into the narrative. The sloppy dialogues, staging and performances, render this movie ineffective and don’t make us drop our jaws us the ground like Venkat might have imagined when he envisioned a reasonably dishonest climax.