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Director:Ezhil
Cast:Prabhu Deva, Jaya Sheel, Sharat Kumar, Aishwaria, Kaveri,Vivek, Vyapuri,Mouli.
The
film works at two levels. At one level, it depicts the deep bonding between
two brothers, Balaram, a notorious rowdy, and his younger sibling Sunil,
a medical student. Balaram, apprehensive that Sunil, short tempered and
emotional, might follow in his footsteps, gives him the best education
he can. But Sunil, touchy where his brother is concerned, picks up quarrels
with anyone who dares to voice anything negative about Balaram. As a result,
he has had to change colleges many a time. The arrival of Sunita brings
about a change in his attitude, though his lack of seriousness at times
irks Sunita. The two fall in love. The scenes of their growing intimacy
are handled very naturally by the director. At one point, Sunita's unscrupulous
brother-in-law tries to force her into marriage with an unsavoury character.
Sunita
and her sister wait for Sunil to save Sunita from the situation, as he
had promised he would. And when
Sunil does arrive, it is too late. For, Sunita's sister seing no way out,
commits suicide to stop the marriage. Sunita, holding Sunil responsible,
parts ways with him. Years later, when the two meet, he is a cardiac surgeon
of repute and she has her sister's child to take care of. Only then does
she realise the reason why Sunil arrived late that day. She rushes to
apologise, but Sunil is on his way to Canada for a new assignment. The
story does have
its flaws. But the freshness in the situations and the treatment makes
it an engaging entertainer. The characters are clearly defined and their
interactions brought out very naturally. Manikandan's camerawork is effective
and S.A. Rajkumar's song numbers are catchy (like 'Kannukulle Unnai).
After playing roadside Romeo in most of his films, Prabhu Deva gets a
suave look here.
He
plays his role with understanding and sensitivity. This may well be the
film that would give his stagnant career the needed boost. Jaya Sheel,
a model, has the glamour and talent and brings out well the various nuances
of the character. Sharat Kumar and Aishwaria in supporting roles are commendable.
Here is one film
where one enjoys Vivek's comedy. Vyapuri as the mute servant, who desperately
tries to convince Sunita of Sunil's innocence and sincerity, steals the
scene in the final sequence. Director Ezhil who tasted success with his
very first film 'Thullatha Manamum Thullum', proves yet again that within
the parameters of commercial cinema one can make a film that is a clean
engaging entertainer.
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