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‘Pichaikkaran 2’ movie review: Vijay Antony fails to recreate his magic, due to a mediocre story and insipid writing

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‘Pichaikkaran 2’ movie review: Vijay Antony fails to recreate his magic, due to a mediocre story and insipid writing

A still from ‘Pichaikkaran 2’ 
| Photo Credit: Special Arragement

In a film industry that has almost never gotten a sequel right, standalone sequels feel like an excuse to cash in on the popularity of a hit film and Pichaikkaran 2 is a textbook example of it. The 2016 film Pichaikkaranwasn’t a revelation but amidst an overdose of action and mother sentiment, director Sasi squeezed in an interesting plot that worked majorly for its mass moments. Pichaikkaran 2 tries to maintain the idea as a scaffolding to build a new story from scratch, and though it gets an intriguing idea, it fails to make headway.

Vijay Antony has shown his abundant inclination towards playing multiple characters. Of the thirteen films he has played the lead in, the ones with multiple roles, including his latest release, are five. While he played a billionaire who moonlighted as a beggar in Pichaikkaran, the sequel has him playing billionaire Vijay Gurumoorthy as well as a beggar named Sathya. While the first film was high on mother sentiment, we’ve got Tamil cinema’s age-old sister sentiment this time. If a rich man had to be poor for a month in the first film, a poor man amasses a wealth of one lakh crores in the sequel. But apart from the dichotomy and parallels, the two films don’t have anything else in common.

Pichaikkaran 2 (Tamil)

Director: Vijay Antony

Cast: Vijay Antony, Kavya Thapar, Dev Gill, John Vijay, Hareesh Peradi, Yogi Babu

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Runtime: 144 minutes

Storyline: When the bad guys implant the brain of a billionaire in a beggar, they don’t know that the recipient is also a purveyor of righteousness

For those working for Vijay Gurumoorthy, greed, as always, gets the better of them and they need to find a nobody whose brain can be transplanted into Vijay’s body. They track down an orphan/beggar in the form of Sathya and let science — that’s understandable to only Stephen Hawkings and Michio Kaku — take its course. They dispose of Sathya’s body in the Dubai desert, erase Vijay’s mind like it’s a hard drive that can be formatted, and voila, we’ve got Vijay’s body with Sathya’s mind. The first 20-odd minutes of Pichaikkaran 2, where the above sequence happens, is over-the-top in a manner that’s unique to Vijay Antony starrers, something I particularly enjoyed in his films like Thimiru Pudichavan, Kodiyil Oruvan, and of course, Pichaikkaran. But, from there, the film goes downhill.

ALSO READ: ‘Thuppakki’ to ‘Petta’ to ‘Pichaikkaran’: Tamil cinema’s 15 best masala movies of the decade

Sathya is obviously no Admiral General Haffaz Aladeen’s simpleton body double from The Dictator, and once he climbs the social ladder, it’s only he who can get himself back down. But keeping in tradition with Tamil cinema heroes’ toxic relationship with the Robin Hood syndrome, Sathya decides to use his wealth to provide basic needs to the impoverished at subsidised prices. He even coins the term ‘Bikili’ to the opulent folks who stay so by basking on the hard work of the poor; this apparently makes him ‘Anti Bikili.’

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A still from ‘Pichaikkaran 2’ 

A still from ‘Pichaikkaran 2’ 
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

With Pichaikkaran 2, Vijay Antony takes over the responsibilities of playing the lead, editor, music director, and for the first time, direction duties too. It’s the acting part where he shines the most. He brings in a variation between the two characters he plays — Vijay is a money-minded business magnate who reaches out to a sanitiser dispenser after holding his dead father’s hands, while Sathya kisses the feet of a child for whom he wishes he had always been there. But the script doesn’t really give him the space to do much. The idea of placing a poor man in the shoes of an affluent one is anything but new — we’ve seen MGR do it in Enga Veettu Pillai, Rajinikanth from the days of Billa, Athisaya Piravi, Uzhaippali and even Sivaji. It’s one of the oldest tropes of double-action films, and what baffles me more is the shockingly simple treatment.

There are moments like the one right before the intermission and when Sathya calls up the Chief Minister to uphold justice that feels similar to the mass moments we loved in Pichaikkaran. But they are few and far between, and by the time he announces an Anti Bikili mall where one can get soaps for 3 Rs, toothbrushes for 7 Rs and an actual house for 23,000 Rs, you completely give up on the film. So much that you actually don’t mind a shoddy VFX shot of a helicopter taking off a huge piece of cloth over a building to unveil an entire mall.

The songs are forgettable, the characters apart from Vijay Antony’s are forgettable, the action isn’t particularly great, and even the humour that worked well in the first film falls flat here despite Yogi Babu’s presence. For a man who has the power to dictate a government, it feels odd that he wouldn’t use that power to find his missing sister. But such logic issues are the least of Pichaikkaran 2’s worries. This mediocre start aside, the director in Vijay Antony evidently has the potential to do more and that’s something we can look forward to. As far as this film is concerned, the insurmountable disappointment beggars all belief.

Pichaikkaran 2 is currently running in theatres

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Movie Reviews

‘Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan’ movie review: Vijay Antony headlines a watered-down mishmash of Hollywood films

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‘Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan’ movie review: Vijay Antony headlines a watered-down mishmash of Hollywood films

A still from ‘Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan’
| Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

Director Vijay Milton is back after six years, and the first few minutes of the Vijay Antony-starrer, Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan, gave the impression that it’s a worthy comeback for both the Vijays. The film starts with a pleasant surprise that it’s a sequel to Vijay Antony’s Salim (2014), which itself was a sequel to his 2012 film Naan. The quick-paced cuts connect the dots swiftly and bring a sense of familiarity to the protagonist of Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan from the get-go; but little did we know that they will also happen to be arguably the most fascinating part of the film.

Karthik (Vijay Antony), who had stolen Salim’s identity in Naan and became a doctor in Salim, has become a covert agency agent who lost his friends and his lady love in an ambush on a rainy day. Now, as a man who lost everything in the rain, and bogged down by survivor’s guilt, Karthik attempts to start afresh. With the help of his Chief (Sarathkumar), he reaches the shores of Andaman and finds refuge at an eatery managed by a mother-son duo. But little does our hero know that despite touching land, he is still in troubled waters when he crosses paths with a local loan shark, Daali (Dhananjay).

A man with a past wanting a fresh start away from the horrors of his past, only to be pulled back into it, is a trope that’s anything but new to Indian cinema. The idea of a double life is something even Vijay Antony himself gave a shot with Pichaikkaran,which turned out to be one of his biggest hits. Be it the drastic change in the protagonist’s life — that comes with the heft of getting accustomed to a new place, new people and new responsibilities — or the mass transformation where he reveals who he really is and what he could possibly do, Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan faulters everywhere Pichaikkaran triumphed.

Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan (Tamil)

Director: Vijay Milton

Cast: Vijay Antony, R Sarathkumar, Sathyaraj, Megha Akash, Dhananjaya, Pruthvi Ambaar

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Runtime: 133 minutes

Storyline: A man with a bloody past tries to start afresh with a new identity only for trouble to knock on his door once again

Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan feels like a hodgepodge of several action films featuring such a protagonist. The core idea seems to be cut from the same cloth as The Equalizer films while a yesteryear killer seeking vengeance for his puppy would remind you of a particular film series starring Keanu Reeves. Inspirations are justifiable when used as crutches to support an otherwise interesting tale, not when turned into stretchers expected to carry an insipid plot.

A still from ‘Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan’

A still from ‘Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan’
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

Past the predictable story, it is the shoddily penned characters and scenes that water down this film. We have the damsel in distress in the form of Sowmiya (Megha Akash); a gabby Burma (Pruthvi Ambaar), who gets thrashed often making us feel that the treatment meted out to him is totally worth it; his mother (Saranya Ponvanan), who says the most unrelatable lines in an attempt to sound profound; and of course, the ever-threatening villain (Dhananjaya), whose idea of terror is serving poison flavoured coffee. Even dependable seniors like Sarathkumar and Saranya, and a cameo by Sathyaraj, fail to save the film from the shallow waters of mediocre writing.

The streaks of potential you see now and then, sadden you further. In a scene, Daali’s ego is bruised after an encounter with a dubious cop (Murali Sharma) but that sub-plot leads nowhere. The triangular love story between the three primary characters doesn’t feel organic. A bit more information on the agency headed by Captain (Sathyaraj) would have added more value to the backstory; instead, the film settles on putting him in expensive clothes, placing him in an embellished underground lair and making him say something along the lines of the actor’s iconic ‘Thagudu, thagudu’ lines.

The film’s title tells you of the poetic feel the makers have gone for, and it’s quite dramatic to place a character with an aversion towards rain on an island surrounded by water, but Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan fails to capitalise on these tropes. What we are left with is a painfully formulaic plot riddled with uninteresting characters and unsurprising happenings that are sure to rain on your parade.

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Mazhai Pidikkatha Manithan is currently running in theatres

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It Ends With Us Movie Reviews: Strong First Reactions Get Shared Online

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It Ends With Us Movie Reviews: Strong First Reactions Get Shared Online

Before It Ends with Us hits theaters on Aug. 9, fans who saw the movie early hit social media to share their thoughts.

It Ends with Us is a film adaptation of the Colleen Hoover novel of the same name. The romance-drama follows Lily Bloom (Lively) as she grapples with a traumatic past, and a new relationship that starts feeling more familiar than she would like.

It stars the likes of Blake Lively, Justin Baldoni, Jenny Slate, and Hasan Minhaj, among many others.

Early Reviews for It Ends with Us Movie

It Ends with Us

Critics and reviewers seem to love It Ends with Us starring Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni, as is made clear their first online reactions to the new movie.

Anna of @bookobsessedgirl on Instagram said that despite never having “high expectations” for movie adaptations of books, “this one just hits in such an amazing way.” She added that despite knowing the plot already, she “still went through all the feelings:”

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“This movie!!! I don’t ever go in with high expectations for book to movie adaptations but this one just hits in such an amazing way. I knew what was going to happen but I still went through all the feelings.”

Victoria Combel of the Instagram account @bookswith_victoria assured fans of the original It Ends with Us novel that “all the quotes you are hoping for are delivered so well.” She added that she “couldn’t see anyone else playing these characters,” and that by the movie’s end, she “was a crying mess:”

“Safe to say yall are going to love this movie!!!! All the quotes you are hoping for are delivered so well and the acting is out of this world … couldn’t see anyone else playing these characters!!! As you can tell by the second photo, I was a crying mess so go check it out Aug 9th when they release the official movie”

Christine from @simply.christine.life on Instagram kept it short and simple, saying she both “cried” and “laughed” at what was “an amazing movie and wonderful book adaptation:”

“I cried. I laughed. It was such an amazing movie and wonderful book adaptation!”

Shannon of @shannonlovesbookss on Instagram said that she “cannot wait to see it again,” and that Lively was “amazing:”

“Last night was one of the most amazing experiences of my life … at Book Bonanza we were surprised with being able to watch an early screening of the book turned movie “it ends with you” by [Colleen Hoover] as well as the amazing [Blake Lively] who plays the lead. … It comes to theaters August 9th! I cannot wait to see it again”

Tiffany Porter of @tiffanypreads called It Ends with Us “INCREDIBLE,” highlighting how “certain challenging scenes” were treated “tastefully” by performers and editors especially. She finished strong, saying that she “firmly [believes] that it will change and save women’s lives:”

“This film is INCREDIBLE!!! The acting. The emotion. Certain challenging scenes performed and edited SO tastefully. It’s so powerful and I firmly believe that it will change and save women’s lives.”

PEOPLE’s Senior Books Editor Lizz Schumer spoke about being apprehensive about some of the more sensitive scenes “as someone who has experienced intimate partner violence.” By the end, though, she “was relieved at how sensitively it was handled:”

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“As someone who has experienced intimate partner violence, I was really nervous to see ‘It Ends With Us.’ I’ve read the book, of course, and talked to a lot of people about how it was handled on the page, but seeing it onscreen, especially in a crowded theater, is a completely different experience to reading it in private.

When the ‘casserole scene’ happened, it took my breath away. And I wasn’t the only one: There were audible gasps throughout the theater … But as the film went on, I was relieved at how sensitively it was handled.”

Sydney of the Instagram page @books.with.sydney said that the movie “did the book such justice:”

“I seriously am so thankful to have got to see a special early screening of [‘It Ends with Us’] … guys, they did the book such justice!! I can’t wait for everyone to see it August 9th!”

Nela of @culturomaniaczka acknowledged that even if it was flawed, and “[not] a perfect film adaptation of the book,” she is “pleased.”

She added that the parts of the novel that were most important to her “were done the best they could,” and described the “execution of the Lily and Ryle relationship thread” as “perfect:”

“From the very beginning, I didn’t have too high expectations for the movie, but I have to say that I had a very nice time watching it. Is it outstanding? No. Is it a perfect film adaptation of the book? No (everything always looks better in my head), but what I have to say is that it sticks very closely to the original work. You can see Colleen Hoover’s great care here, and really the scenes that I cared about the most were done the best they could.

I have to say quite honestly that I am pleased. With the perfect execution of the Lily and Ryle relationship thread, where, just like in the book, we don’t see the person who really is until the very end. With the inclusion of quotes from the book. With the MUSIC!!!! And also from the cast. Blake did very well with her role, but I think that Justin Baldoni did the best job here as Ryle.”

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Kayla of @kaylasversionnn on X (formerly Twitter) called It Ends with Us “absolutely incredible,” adding positively that it “truly will put you through ALL the feels:”

“just got to see a premiere of [‘It Ends with Us’] and it was absolutely incredible! truly will put you through ALL the feels in the best way possible (and i mightttt have screamed when my tears ricochet started playing)”

Author R.K. Lilley also praised how emotional the movie was, saying that despite knowing she would cry, she “cried even more than [she] thought [she] would:”

“So many tissues were used.  I knew I would cry, but I cried even more than I thought I would … It’s so fucking good, guys!”

How Will It Ends with Us Book Fans Like the Movie?

Based on the reactions from reviewers — most coming from reading-related social media pages — It Ends with Us book fans will be generally satisfied by how the movie adapts the original novel.

Many of the reactions specifically pointed out how well the book’s darker theming was handled, which is hugely important given the prevalence of traumatic experiences in the story.

There are quotes pulled directly from the book, and the novel’s storytelling structure seems to have been adapted with care.

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Ultimately, though, fans will have to see for themselves when It Ends with Us hits theaters on Friday, Aug. 9.

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Trap Review: M. Night Shyamalan’s Silly, Self-Aware Thriller Is A Messy Tale Of Two Movies – SlashFilm

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Trap Review: M. Night Shyamalan’s Silly, Self-Aware Thriller Is A Messy Tale Of Two Movies – SlashFilm




It was supposed to be the Summer of Shyamalan. After spending the last decade scratching and clawing his way out of director’s jail with one self-financed hit at the box office after another, M. Night Shyamalan must’ve had 2024 circled on the calendar of his comeback tour for quite some time. The one-two punch of “Old” (starring 2022’s biggest Best Supporting Actor snub, the Beach That Makes You Grow Old) and “Knock at the Cabin” felt like a return to the auteur’s minimalist roots, but a quirk of timing meant moviegoing audiences would be introduced to the next generation of Shyamalans in little more than a two-month span. In June, his younger daughter Ishana unveiled her directorial debut while his eldest, Saleka, comes to the forefront this August with her acting debut in M. Night’s latest. “The Watchers” ultimately produced an uneven, if promising glimpse into the future. As for the latter, well, let’s just say “Trap” likely won’t win over any new converts nor rank among his greatest efforts.

Yet for those who identify as among the Shyamalan-pilled — the ones on the right side of cinematic history, in other words – this summer might not be a lost cause, after all.

“Trap” is many things at once: a cleverly-constructed thriller centered on the unlikeliest of protagonists, a darkly comedic lark that’s much sillier (complimentary) than many will expect, and a twisty genre film verging on B-movie/exploitation territory. It’s also a high-concept premise that runs out of steam awfully early, accompanied by a script that’s much less involving by the end than it is to start — a delineation marked by a plot point far too specific to spoil, but one that feels unmistakable in the moment as all the air is let out of the room. Above all else, however, it’s another deliciously complicated addition to a filmography that simply refuses to fit into any neat and tidy boxes.

Is this a lot of words to say that “Trap” is kind of a disappointment? Maybe, but since when has that stopped the more open-minded of us from meeting a film halfway and on its own terms? Messy and destined to divide audiences as it may be, this is one summertime “Trap” (mostly) worth springing.

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Trap is exactly the movie it needs to be … for the first hour, at least

“We’re not gonna break any laws.” “Don’t let people fool you.”

With early lines of dialogue like the ones above, nobody can accuse Shyamalan of not being in on his own joke. That much should’ve been readily apparent from the moment “The Visit” (typically regarded as the beginning of his comeback tour) dropped the dweebiest, whitest tween rapper on us ever captured on film or when “Old” featured characters such as “Mid-Sized Sedan” and Shyamalan’s own extended cameo, where he happened to play a major villain in the story. In “Trap,” that wry and deceptively self-aware sense of humor is back on display as soon as the film opens on a shot of Saleka Shyamalan’s world-famous pop star, Lady Raven, on a T-shirt worn by Riley (Abigail Donoghue). Having dragged her father Cooper (Josh Hartnett) along to the concert she’s been dying to see, the young stan is downright giddy with excitement — an infectious energy that’s only matched by Cooper’s overcompensating dad jokes and aw-shucks goofiness. Everything here lives or dies by Hartnett’s performance, and his many, many sure-to-be polarizing acting choices make him a worthy addition to Shyamalan’s canon of off-kilter leads.

Long before editor Noemi Katharina Preiswerk cuts away to recurring images of cops standing at the ready and SWAT teams descending on the venue, it’s clear that Shyamalan is purposefully toying with our expectations and assumptions. That’s because this is the rare movie where the twist has been spelled out beforehand: Cooper is, of course, secretly the serial killer known as “The Butcher,” responsible for the deaths of at least 12 victims, and the entire event has been turned into a sprawling manhunt designed to capture him specifically. As absurd as it sounds, this is actually based loosely on a real historical event, though that’s been otherwise transformed into a pulpy, boiling-pot premise fit for a Shyamalan thriller.

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True to form, the writer/director knows exactly when and how to ramp up the tension in the early going. He does so by confining much of the action within the interior of this fictional, Philadelphia-set arena. As we wait to see what this sociopathic and increasingly desperate villain will do to get out of this inescapable mess, we’re firmly trapped in his point of view for almost the entirety of the runtime — an intentionally suffocating decision reflected by cinematographer Sayombhu Mukdeeprom (“Call Me By Your Name,” “Suspiria,” “Challengers”), whose roving camerawork represents an extension of Cooper’s own perspective as the walls close in around him.

Trap loses momentum and delivers another divisive ending

It’s an issue that has plagued even some of the greatest one-location movies ever made: How do you maintain a high level of stakes and momentum throughout every minute of a story that takes place largely in the same place? Without spoiling anything, it’s difficult to dissect exactly how “Trap” approaches this conundrum and ultimately fails to take full advantage of its premise. For much of the first hour or so, Shyamalan derives plenty of tension (and a surprising amount of laughs) out of Cooper finding excuses to leave his daughter, avoid the authorities, and frantically search for a way out. The moments where he turns into Jason Bourne, surreptitiously entering employee-only zones and stealing police walkie-talkies to listen in on their operation, are only bested by his bursts of MacGyver-like improvisation to cause sudden feints and distractions. This first act even builds to a gasp-inducing climax and a point of no return — one of the boldest plot turns (if not necessarily a “twist”) I can remember in any recent genre movie.

Once the plot progresses beyond this, however, viewers might end up with the sinking feeling that Shyamalan has just shown the ace up his sleeve — one that maybe shouldn’t have been played so soon.

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Up to that narrative pivot, the script had at least offered some food for thought in terms of theme. Aspects of modern life such as social media, the prevalence (and many different uses) of phones, and the connections we foster as a result feed naturally into the film’s more pulpier concerns. All throughout the concert, the incredibly precise framing and blocking of Cooper and Riley (as remarked upon on Twitter by Shyamalan himself), dwarfed by the massive screens projecting Lady Raven to the masses from the stage, add an unsettlingly effective layer of artifice to the proceedings. And, yes, fans have another hilariously meta Shyamalan cameo to look forward to, which provides one of the best laughs in the entire film. But when the film quite literally runs out of plot, only the filmmaker’s sheer determination and commitment to the bit manage to salvage an ending that throws logic and reason out the door several times over. Provided you haven’t mentally checked out by this point, however, it might just leave you rooting for the villain.

Whether that’s Cooper or Shyamalan himself, one thing’s for certain. The Summer of Shyamalan is about to heat up several degrees, and we wouldn’t want it any other way.

/Film Rating 6 out of 10

‘Trap” releases in theaters August 2, 2024.

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