Saturday, January 9, 2021

                                                                           Maara


Director: Dhilip Kumar

Cast: Madhavan, Shraddha Srinath, Mouli


★★

 

Statutory Warning: If you are expecting to relive the magic of Charlie, then stay away.

 

A young Tessa, who grows up to find her match as told by a wise old lady in the bus journey once upon a time, embarks on a solo trip where she gets drawn into a surreal world of art and faceless artist behind the magic. An art-book, at the den of the artist Maara, which also is the rented room of Tessa, now, has drawings of a series of events that stops with suspense of Dr Kani. To know the ending, she embarks on another journey. Each and every character she meets has their own stories and flashbacks and none help her to come to a logical conclusion. By this you would have spent an hour or so watching the movie where Maara aka Madhavan is shown a couple of times on the screen. FYI, if you are a diehard Madhavan fan.

Almost every scene is a drag, with Tessa wanting to know the story and the characters she meets have their own story than the answer to the puzzle. Even when Tessa finally meets Dr Kani, and she is about to tell the ending, Mouli and team interrupts and unwanted dialogues and another day spent to come to the actual point. By the time Tessa knows the ending, Dr Kani confuses her with another puzzle. Was Tessa’s search just the climax of the story in the Art-Book or her new beginnings with Maara? Only later you will realize that search was also for Vellayya’s (Mouli) long lost love Meenakshi. By the time you come to climax, chances are you slip into sleep and have your own sweet dreams. Especially, if you are watching the movie after your work hours.

 

The lead cast, Madhavan and Shraddha Srinath comes nowhere near the magical pair of Dulquer & Parvathi or the movie Maara, nowhere close to the original masterpiece Charlie. Only saving grace is Art Direction and the Cinematography. Else, the journey is very short that is unnecessarily stretched to tire the audience.

 

A request to filmmakers. Please don’t show epileptic episodes of characters unless it is something to do with medical scripts. And, searching for a key bunch during seizures is not the treatment for this. Even more so by a lady who is on her way to organize a medical camp? Please grow up and be sensible.

 


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