The first half has a taut
script that makes for some very interesting viewing. Well-etched colourful
characters and engaging situations keep the pace going, and a suspense is
built around the hero too. But then the film moves to the second half, a
jump to his past, and then back again to the present, where the hero
completes his vendetta plan. The second half is a complete let-down,
slip-shod as it is in its scripting and narration, the new characters
introduced not very interesting either. If only the situations here had
been worked out better, the film would have turned out to be one of
Sharat#$#s more memorable ones.
Sharat plays the dual roles of
Arasu and Nataraj, the son and father respectively. The film opens with
the arrival of Arasu, the new temple-accountant, to a village. Mild and
soft-natured he#$#s wooed and bullied by the priest#$#s daughter Meera. Life
goes on smoothly for a while, till Arasu at one point is forced to reveal
his real identity, and his purpose in taking refuge there. The second half
refers to the past, where Arasu#$#s father Nataraj plays the central role. A
local big-wig, Nataraj clashes with the father-son duo of Saba and Guna,
leading to a brutal end to him and his wife. Arasu lies low, biding his
time, to have his vendetta.
Sharat plays the mild
mannered, soft Arasu with conviction, Nataraj being more of the #$#Nattamai#$#
style. Simran fits in perfectly as the village lass taking liberties with
Arasu, shocked when his real nature comes to the fore. Vadivelu provides
the comic relief. The scenes of the #$#baddies#$# are not handled well, for
Sai Kumar and Riyaz Khan hardly get any meaty scenes. Bharat Murali, as
the investigating cop, is clearly wasted.
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