Saturday, June 16, 2007

Sivaji - THE BOSS - Review



Most of the times, a movie would come with such huge expectations that it would just crush under its own weight but once in a lifetime, there comes a movie which defies realism, gravity, logic and still prove to be an enthralling and riveting experience. Sivaji belongs to the second kind. Its escapist cinema at its best. Who needs a story when the movie is all about style, substance and above all the SUPERSTAR?

The first half has the usual dose of comedy and romance aimed at the family audience and the kids, with punch dialogues kept at a minimum. Sivaji, the US return software engineer wants to do something good to the society and starts building hospitals and colleges for the poor and the needy. In the process, he gets into the bad books of one Adi Seshan, a big industrialist. The movie really moves into fourth gear, a few reels before the interval when Sivaji loses all his wealth and property because of the villain’s machinations, and is just left with a single one rupee coin. From this point onwards, the story is all about a one man crusade against the rich Indians who amass huge wealth by minting Black money, how he converts them into white (a la Dawood Ibrahim!) and how he successfully overpowers the villain. Actually the movie is all about BLACK. Be it the skin color of the hero which is ridiculed by the heroine or the “Cool” shades that radiate with vibrant energy, the black over coat which oozes class n style, black is the color associated with the honest hero contrasting the all white attire of the villain. Though the story is very thin on paper and some of the scenes are plain outlandish (the train scene for example), the sheer screen presence of Rajni more than makes up for the lack of a cohesive story line. The last few reels of the movie, starting from the athiradi song, with a charismatic Rajni in a clean shaven avatar, would be lapped up by his fans and make the audience root for more. Shankar has unabashedly donned his fanboy hat and has paid homage to the biggest brand in South Indian cinema. The first night scene, with Rajni in his inimitable style imitating the superstars of the yore, should be one of the most hilarious scenes ever conceptualized and executed in Tamil cinema. Wow!

Rajni in the title role is the best thing about the movie despite excellent performances from all the lead actors and astounding work by all the technicians. Thalaivar’s dance in the athiradi song is out of the world and Hats off to the costume design and make up team for making him look at least 20 years younger.

The villain in this movie doesn’t mouth loud dialogues and comes across as a polished and sophisticated person. Suman as the suave villain fits the role to a T. There is a scene in which Suman confronts Rajni outside the court, which really vindicates Shankar’s choice for the villain. Shriya is gorgeous in the songs, though otherwise she doesn’t have much scope to perform. Her dance movements just accentuate her curves and her perfectly toned body is a treat to the eyes. Vivek as rajni’s “ammathambi” brings the whole house down with his witty one-liners and digs at the present crop of heroes. The rest of the cast are adequate and it is good to see the old foes, Rajni and Raghuvaran (in a special appearance) on the same page. Nayantara looks like a dream in the opening song.

The dialogues in the movie, with constant references to rajni’s yesteryear hits would be a big hit and would appeal to the mass audience. Sujatha deserves a pat on his back for coming up with the perfect dialogues for a Rajni movie and not being too rhetorical. The racer-sharp dialogues in the tea kadai scene, when rajni’s star is on the ascendancy in the movie, would make the audience go crazy in the aisles. AR Rahman's songs are even better on screen. KV Anand’s cinematography and Thotta Tharani’s art direction are pleasing to the eyes and provide the necessary grandeur associated with a Shankar movie. Kudos!

Shankar’s screenplay and story are not the plus points of the movie and the pace is a little sluggish in the first half but his deft execution proves why the word “Flop” doesn’t exist in his dictionary.

Finally, SIVAJI-THE BOSS is all about one man and the man delivers big time.

A “Cool” movie for the hot summer!

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4 Comments:

At June 16, 2007 at 12:18 PM, Blogger Siddharth Loganathan said...

Nicely written ......but sadly LACKING IN ORIGINAL, HONEST OPINION... like SHIVAJI was made for the masses... this review panders to populist opinion.... definitely lacks a soulful assessment...

 
At June 19, 2007 at 11:23 AM, Blogger Unknown said...

Good review though "A “Cool” movie for the hot summer!" cld have been avoided....

 
At June 23, 2007 at 11:20 AM, Blogger Ashwini said...

quite a nice review...its totally out of the question to expect logic from rajini's movie...i totally agree wit ur review...BUT WAIT...no...nayan tara doesn look like a dream...Rajini rocks! Am head over heels in love with him...:D...

 
At June 27, 2007 at 7:39 PM, Blogger d said...

Any plans for 3rd time?

 

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