ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,2/10
4,9 k
MA NOTE
Une jeune des bidonvilles se bat pour mettre fin au frelatage des produits alimentaires commis par les grandes entreprises agroalimentaires.Une jeune des bidonvilles se bat pour mettre fin au frelatage des produits alimentaires commis par les grandes entreprises agroalimentaires.Une jeune des bidonvilles se bat pour mettre fin au frelatage des produits alimentaires commis par les grandes entreprises agroalimentaires.
- Prix
- 2 victoires et 8 nominations au total
Sivakarthikeyan
- Arivu
- (as Siva Karthikeyan)
Thambi Ramaiah
- Stella Bruce
- (as Thambi Ramayya)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe slum shown in this film is actually a set work done by the Ace Art Director T. Muthuraj done over 7.5 acres of land. And another interesting thing is that the over bridge shown behind the slum was actually built using the materials needed to build an exact original bridge- only thing being only a portion of the bridge was built and rest was filled up by CGI. And any trees found in the slum was actually brought and grown in the slum to give a realistic feel to the slum. Even the waste products and dumpings in the slum are real waste brought from a dumpyard to give the realistic feel.
- Autres versionsThe UK release was cut, the distributor chose to remove scenes of strong violence and injury detail in order to obtain a 12A classification. An uncut 15 classification was available.
Commentaire en vedette
Velaikkaran, Mohan Raja's follow-up post his Thani Oruvan revival, tries a little too hard to repeat the success formula of a David vs. Goliath story but ends up a mixed bag. This might be considered Sivakarthikeyan's 'maiden' venture where the character he plays, has a greater mission than 'wooing the next-door girl'. Add a suave 'corporate' Fahadh Faasil to that. Anirudh's by-now-charbuster compositions. Mohan Raja's slick direction (and co-written by his Thani Oruvan writer-duo Subha) coupled with Ramji's visuals. Sounds like a sure shot winner on paper, right?
The final product we receive is a film that entertains partially but is more interested in giving us lectures on what we read in the news (and on social media) every now and then. Yes, it tackles the concept of 'food adulteration' - in a part nonsensical, part docudrama way. The first half is in fact the better of the two - where we get to witness inventively written scenes such as the one where Arivu (SK) does live commentary for a gang war, his struggle when it comes to dealing with the self-proclaimed feudal lord of the area Kasi (Prakash Raj), how his life gets entangled with the 'feminist' Mrinalini (Nayanthara). Even the build-up given to Fahadh Faasil's Aadhi (a cunning corporate fox) is neat. We sense he's smarter than the protagonist, and for obvious reasons.
But Mohan Raja ditches everything 'commercial' in the latter half. The comedy is lacking, there's tonnes of sentiment thrown in (with character after character walking in and out without bringing much to the plate), plus lengthy monologues on the functionality of the FMCG industry. The solutions that it presents for the issues that arise also don't come across as path-breaking. Arivu turns into an activist of sorts, driven forward by the support of the blue collar laborers in the industry, and the transition (from newbie RJ to social crusader) isn't one bit smooth.
What works for the film are the factors I've mentioned: the cinematography is glossy and polished; the music and BGM by Anirudh are excellent and suit the film's tone perfectly (on most occasions), and an excellent Fahadh Faasil (who's debuting in Tamil) who makes the best of an underwritten character. There's no questioning Raja's honest intentions in 'Velaikkaran'. Just that it all blows out of proportion by the time we get to the climax - we see crappy stereotyping such as Corporate Chairmen all being depicted as ruthless, and employees who believe everything on 'face value' (noone's that innocent anymore, duh). Thankfully a social media activism angle is avoided - it's already an overcooked dish.
So, if you're asking me whether you should go for 'Velaikkaran', I'd say watch it comfortably at home when it airs on TV or rent a DVD. 2h 40m isn't a lot of fun at the cinema halls, especially with a second half as dead-weight as this.
Verdict: Had the potential to be better!
The final product we receive is a film that entertains partially but is more interested in giving us lectures on what we read in the news (and on social media) every now and then. Yes, it tackles the concept of 'food adulteration' - in a part nonsensical, part docudrama way. The first half is in fact the better of the two - where we get to witness inventively written scenes such as the one where Arivu (SK) does live commentary for a gang war, his struggle when it comes to dealing with the self-proclaimed feudal lord of the area Kasi (Prakash Raj), how his life gets entangled with the 'feminist' Mrinalini (Nayanthara). Even the build-up given to Fahadh Faasil's Aadhi (a cunning corporate fox) is neat. We sense he's smarter than the protagonist, and for obvious reasons.
But Mohan Raja ditches everything 'commercial' in the latter half. The comedy is lacking, there's tonnes of sentiment thrown in (with character after character walking in and out without bringing much to the plate), plus lengthy monologues on the functionality of the FMCG industry. The solutions that it presents for the issues that arise also don't come across as path-breaking. Arivu turns into an activist of sorts, driven forward by the support of the blue collar laborers in the industry, and the transition (from newbie RJ to social crusader) isn't one bit smooth.
What works for the film are the factors I've mentioned: the cinematography is glossy and polished; the music and BGM by Anirudh are excellent and suit the film's tone perfectly (on most occasions), and an excellent Fahadh Faasil (who's debuting in Tamil) who makes the best of an underwritten character. There's no questioning Raja's honest intentions in 'Velaikkaran'. Just that it all blows out of proportion by the time we get to the climax - we see crappy stereotyping such as Corporate Chairmen all being depicted as ruthless, and employees who believe everything on 'face value' (noone's that innocent anymore, duh). Thankfully a social media activism angle is avoided - it's already an overcooked dish.
So, if you're asking me whether you should go for 'Velaikkaran', I'd say watch it comfortably at home when it airs on TV or rent a DVD. 2h 40m isn't a lot of fun at the cinema halls, especially with a second half as dead-weight as this.
Verdict: Had the potential to be better!
- arungeorge13
- 29 déc. 2017
- Lien permanent
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Détails
Box-office
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 569 727 $ US
- Durée2 heures 40 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was Velaikkaran (2017) officially released in Canada in English?
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