Cast
|
:
|
Dhanush,
Samantha Ruth Prabhu, Amy Jackson
Raadhika
Sarathkumar, KS Ravikumar,
Sathish,
Adith Arun, Prakash Kumar
|
Director
|
:
|
Velraj
|
Cinematographer
|
:
|
A
Kumaran
|
Music
|
:
|
Anirudh
Ravichander
|
Producer
|
:
|
Gopuram
Films
|
Release Date
|
:
|
December
18, 2015
|
Length
|
:
|
2 Hours
|
Language
|
:
|
Tamil
|
My Thoughts
After the much-appreciated
Velai
Illa Pattathari, Velraj-Dhanush-Anirudh combo joins hand together for the
much-anticipated Thangamagan.
Tamizh, enacted by
Dhanush belongs to a middle class family. He lives with his parents in a small
rented house, enjoying his life with his two friends – Kumaran (Sathish) and
Aravind (Adith Arun). His father (K S Ravikumar) is absent minded. He is the
kind of father every teenager would love to have; friendly and understanding. As
a teenager, Tamizh falls in love with Hema D’Souza (Amy Jackson). After dating
for a year, they part due to difference of opinions. Eventually, Hema marries
Aravind. Tamizh also marries Yamuna (Samantha Ruth Prabhu). Tamizh’s life
freezes when his father commits suicide. The rest of the story is about Tamizh’s
efforts to unravel the mystery behind his father’s death.
At a broader level,
Thangamagan story can be linked to wider issues like corruption, bribery and how
money has become the center of people’s life. It can also be associated to the difficulties
that good-hearted and kind men (a rarity) face in day-to-life. But, the
screenplay fails to establish these ideas. The first half revolves around
Tamizh and Hema. The way their love blossoms and how they eventually break-up
is convincingly shown. However, Tamizh’s relationship with his parents is not
well-portrayed; especially his mother. Both KS Ravikumar and Raadhika have very
little role to play. On the other hand, the growing distance between Tamizh and
his friend/cousin Aravind is well narrated. Yamuna comes across as a matured
and stable woman with rational thinking. The relationship between Tamizh and
Yamuna is beautifully conveyed.
Anirudh’s background
BGM is very good. “Enna Solla” is mesmerizing (both audio and video). “Tak Bak”
is peppy and catchy. “Jodi Nilave” is totally out of place and makes the second
half more lagging.
The cinematographer
has done great job by making the first half look colorful and the second half somber;
suiting the moods of the film. A better editing could have made the second half
a little better. The dialogs between Tamizh and Hema as well as Tamizh and
Kumaran are nice. All others seem redundant.
In short, if story,
screenplay, dialogs and the establishment of protagonist’s relationships with
other characters were the strengths of Velai
Illa Pattathari, they are the weaknesses of Thangamagan. Although such
comparisons should never be done by movie-lovers, compromise on these critical
areas should never be done by movie-makers.
In short, Thangamagan
fails to hold audience’s interests.
If you are an ardent
Dhanush fan (like me), you may watch it once. After all, Dhanush shines and has
delivered a brilliant performance (as always).
Rating
2.5/5
I don't think I am going to see this movie :)
ReplyDeleteDestination Infinity
Watch it when it comes on TV :P
DeleteDint see the movie but liked the dialogue sondhakrana mattum nambadhey!
ReplyDeleteHaha... I liked it too :)
Delete