Two men poles apart in their
nature, outlook and background and thrown together in a chance encounter,
as reluctant travel companions on their journey from the flood-hit Orissa
to their home town in Tamil Nadu. As they travel together through various
misadventures, the younger one Anbarasu (#$#call me Ars#$#), a smart and suave
advertising film-maker finds himself drawn to his older companion Nalla
Sivam, and realises that he#$#s much to learn from him.
Sivam#$#s crude talk, ways and
jokes had repulsed him earlier and he had scornfully brushed off the older
man#$#s friendly overtures. In the company of Sivam however he soon finds
himself evolving from a fussy, finicky, self-centered man, to a more
mature and a more humane human being who comes face to face with the harsh
realities of life. And for Sivam, at the end of it all, it is the complete
exorcism of the ghosts of his past, and reconciling himself to his
destiny.
It#$#s a touching
story, laced with humour and sentiment, narrated with sensitivity by
Sunder C, a meaningful film from Lakshmi Movie Makers. Engaging despite
its slow pace at times. Kamal Haasan#$#s interesting story and
screenplay - strongly inspired by the Steve Martin starrer #$#Planes,
trains and automobiles#$#, and Madan#$#s punchy, meaningful lines form the
backbone to the narration. Enhancing the effect is Arthur Wilson#$#s camera
and Vidyasagar#$#s music that captures the mood throughout. Slick editing
(Sai Suresh), and authentic sets (Prabhakar) enhance the
effect.
It#$#s a brilliant
portrayal by Kamal Haasan, capturing impressively the various stages the
character goes through. #$#Comrade#$# Nalla the workers#$# leader who stages
street plays to create awareness among the people. Nalla falling in love
with Bala, the boss#$# daughter, but not apologetic about it. Deciding to
back out, but changing his mind after the support from his companions, and
eloping with Bala for a secret marriage. The bus accident which renders
him a cripple, with his handsome face scarred, a part of his moustache and
a tooth missing, an anti-thesis of the person he was earlier. Finding Bala
gone out of his life, but ploughing on for the cause of the workers, a
strong belief in the goodness of humans. Kamal Haasan goes through the
whole scenario re-establishing his credentials as one of the finest actors
we have.
The perfect foil
is Madhavan. Pitted against an actor of Kamal#$#s calibre, Madhavan plays
the fussy, self-centered, suave man with perfect ease. A little put-on in
the later scenes at the hospital-camp, where the evolution to a more
humane person takes place. But here it#$#s more the clichιd scenes than the
actor which is to be blamed.
Kiran is a revelation here.
Glamorous, but not the dresses which had raised eye-brows, in her films
earlier. Proving she can perform if given the chance. The dubbing voice
given by Anuradha Sriram fitting her perfectly. Coming out well in the
scene where she argues about their love with Kamal. Brilliant is Uma Riyaz
Khan as Kamal#$#s comrade, doing street-plays with him, hiding her love for
him, resenting when she sees him closer to Bala, and in a final outburst
berating him for not reciprocating her love, a nice comic-tragic touch to
the scene. Nasser as Bala#$#s father
and Santhana Bharathi as his right hand provide support.
Sensitive and touching,
light-hearted and humourous, it#$#s a film to be watched. One of those rare
cases where the title is relevant to the theme. #$#Anbe Sivam#$# - a story
about Anbu and Sivam. Anbe Sivam - love is God. What Sivam firmly believed
in.
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