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Review: Disappointing ‘Beauty,’ another college admissions scandal and more movies

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Review: Disappointing ‘Beauty,’ another college admissions scandal and more movies

‘Magnificence’

The musical drama “Magnificence” ought to’ve been a smash. Director Andrew Dosunmu is famend for his visually placing photos equivalent to “Mom of George,” which provide intense, expressionistic takes on alienation. Screenwriter and co-producer Lena Waithe is acclaimed for her work on the TV sequence “Grasp of None” and “The Chi.” The movie has a grabby premise, evenly fictionalizing the story of the pre-fame Whitney Houston, right here named Magnificence (Gracie Marie Bradley). The solid consists of Niecy Nash because the singer’s compassionate mom, Giancarlo Esposito as her domineering father and Sharon Stone because the supervisor who needs her to be blander — which means “whiter.”

But the film’s Tribeca Movie Competition premiere got here and went with out a lot buzz, and now the movie is dropping on Netflix with even much less fanfare. On the day it premiered on streaming, “Magnificence” didn’t also have a Wikipedia web page. It’s extremely uncommon for a undertaking with this many massive names to garner so little consideration. And it’s unlucky, too, as a result of whereas “Magnificence” doesn’t actually work, it does fail in fascinating methods.

Waithe’s model of Houston’s story — by which a phenomenally gifted, simply marketable singer is secretly having a lesbian affair along with her private assistant — is suffused with private feeling, coming from an overtly homosexual Black girl who herself has needed to hustle to make it in present enterprise. However Waithe too typically pares the story all the way down to archetypes in ways in which clumsily recall mid-Twentieth century progressive theater. Magnificence’s bickering brothers are named Cain and Abel, for instance, and Stone’s character is named “Colonizer.”

Dosunmu has a couple of standout moments of staging, together with a haunting scene the place Magnificence watches each Judy Garland and Patti LaBelle sing “Someplace Over the Rainbow” and ponders which form of performer she ought to be. However this semi-true story is in the end too sketchy to have something efficient to say about Houston, mainstream success or being within the closet. On paper, this film is de facto one thing. Onscreen, it lacks dimension.

‘Magnificence.’ R, for language and drug use. 1 hour, 35 minutes. Out there on Netflix.

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A scene from the documentary “Accepted.”

(Greenwich Leisure)

‘Accepted’

In November of 2018, the New York Occasions revealed a narrative about T.M. Landry School Preparatory, an unaccredited Louisiana personal college that had gotten a number of optimistic nationwide press for touchdown underprivileged teenagers in Ivy League faculties however which, based on the newspaper, had been faking transcripts and abusing college students. Documentary filmmaker Dan Chen and his crew began interviewing Landry children — together with the college’s charismatic co-founder Mike Landry — earlier than the scandal broke, aspiring to comply with a handful of seniors by way of commencement. As an alternative, his film “Accepted” went a special means.

The manufacturing’s unusual circumstances clearly had an affect on what “Accepted” grew to become — and never all the time for the higher. The story that emerged midshoot calls for extra investigative rigor fairly than a free assortment of interviews and slice-of-life scenes. Nonetheless, “Accepted” is remarkably affecting, because of the best way Chen works his means again to what his doc is de facto about.

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The Landry children who had their school goals yanked away by the Occasions exposé aren’t frauds. They’re good and vibrant kids who felt they wanted an establishment like Landry to assist them make the form of connections that wealthy college students often get pleasure from. By specializing in the collateral injury of the scandal, “Accepted” takes on the entire damaged school admissions system, arguing that the obsession with “elite” universities could also be an impediment to training.

‘Accepted.’ Not rated. 1 hour, 32 minutes. In restricted launch, together with the Laemmle Monica Movie Middle, Santa Monica; additionally out there on VOD.

A woman and two men in spacesuits bathed in red light in the movie "Rubikon."

George Blagden, from left, Julia Franz Richter and Mark Ivanir within the film “Rubikon.”

(Philipp Brozsek / IFC Midnight)

‘Rubikon’

Director Leni Lauritsch’s debut characteristic movie, “Rubikon,” is a science fiction drama tackling massive points in a scaled-down means, placing three characters aboard an area station and letting them speak it out. Julia Franz Richter performs Hannah, a soldier on an environmentally devastated future Earth, the place the rich dwell in sealed bubbles and the armies work for companies. She and wealthy child Gavin (George Blagden) go to an orbiting science lab the place Dimitri (Mark Ivanir) is experimenting with life-sustaining algae-centered ecosystems. There, all three keep away from the poisonous cloud beneath that wipes out a lot of the planet’s inhabitants.

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Except for a scene the place Hannah is on a spacewalk and sees the lights going out on Earth, “Rubikon” doesn’t have a number of typical style “motion.” Lauritsch and her co-screenwriter, Jessica Lind — and their excellent solid — as a substitute emphasize the interaction between this well-meaning trio, who all have completely different concepts about whether or not they need to head again dwelling to hitch the survivors or keep in area the place their know-how can preserve them alive. The dialogue-heavy state of affairs robs the movie of some rigidity, however the conversations are sometimes fairly thrilling as these three debate what they owe to what stays of humanity, in a society that way back stopped caring about anybody who couldn’t afford a secure place to dwell.

‘Rubikon.’ Not rated. 1 hour, 50 minutes. In restricted launch, together with the Laemmle Glendale; additionally out there on VOD.

‘The Passenger’

There are echoes of John Carpenter’s “The Factor” and “Massive Bother in Little China” within the Spanish horror-comedy “The Passenger,” a classy first characteristic from co-directors Raúl Cerezo and Fernando González Gómez. Written by Luis Sánchez-Polack, the movie stars Ramiro Blas as Blasco, a blustery ride-share driver who checks the nerves of his three newest passengers as he drives the ladies by way of the countryside, all whereas boasting chauvinistically about his bygone days as a matador and rock star. Then Blasco’s van smashes right into a stranger within the darkness, and shortly the driving force and his fares change into bonded of their struggle towards what seems to be a shape-shifting alien.

The filmmakers are extremely resourceful. Whereas they shot “The Passenger” principally in and round one beat-up previous camper in the course of nowhere, their film is nonetheless suspenseful and humorous, with a couple of good jolts and gore results to fulfill fright followers. However the actual key to this image’s success is the character element. Blasco particularly is not any extraordinary horror hero — or sufferer, for that matter. He’s a fast-talking eccentric, typically irritating and typically noble — like someone who walked out of a Pedro Almodóvar movie and ran smack right into a monster film.

‘The Passenger.’ In Spanish with English subtitles. Not rated. 1 hour, half-hour. Out there on VOD.

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‘Sniper: The White Raven’

The revenge thriller “Sniper: The White Raven” is simplistic however stirring: the story of a Ukrainian hippie who trains to change into a deadly killer after invading Russian forces kill his spouse. Director and co-writer Marian Bushan takes time to determine the idyllic lifetime of the ecology-minded small-town physics trainer Mykola (Pavlo Aldoshyn) earlier than a mindless act of violence upends it. After that, “Sniper” follows a standard “uncooked recruit will get whipped into form” plot as Mykola joins the military and learns to coexist with troopers — whereas additionally impressing his superiors together with his intelligence and dedication. Bushan employs completely different types all through the movie, revealing a knack for dynamic motion that his extra low-key first half-hour doesn’t recommend. He delivers the products for anybody searching for an intense warfare film — however he doesn’t let the capturing begin till everybody understands the stakes.

‘Sniper: The White Raven.’ In Ukrainian with English subtitles. R, for violence, bloody photographs, language and a few sexuality/nudity. 2 hours. In restricted theatrical launch; additionally out there on VOD.

Additionally on streaming and VOD

“Endangered” covers the delicate state of journalism world wide as residents more and more get data from sketchy web sources that vilify conventional media. Administrators Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady profile 4 reporters (working in Mexico, Brazil and the U.S.) over the course of 1 yr, capturing their rising concern that enormous parts of the general public now belief authoritarians, pundits and conspiracy theorists greater than the free press. Out there on HBO Max

“The Sword and the Dragon” (also referred to as “Ilya Muromets”) is a traditional Soviet-era fantasy movie, directed by Aleksandr Ptushko within the mid-Fifties after which reedited and redubbed in markets world wide. Newly restored in 4K, the film appears to be like gorgeous and feels epic, telling a twisty story from Russian folklore a few knight who battles invading armies, traitors, demons and fire-breathing monsters to guard his land and household. Out there on VOD.

Out there now on DVD and Blu-ray

“Out of Sight” is a profession spotlight for the prolific director Steven Soderbergh: a slick adaptation of an Elmore Leonard novel a few veteran thief (George Clooney) who flirts and matches wits with a U.S. marshal (Jennifer Lopez). The brand new 4K UHD version captures the film’s delicate nuances of colour and in addition consists of earlier variations’ glorious particular options — together with a enjoyable commentary observe by Soderbergh and screenwriter Scott Frank. KL Studio Classics

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Movie Reviews

IF (2024) – Movie Review

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IF (2024) – Movie Review

IF, 2024. 

Directed by John Krasinski.
Starring Ryan Reynolds, John Krasinski, Cailey Fleming, Fiona Shaw, Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Louis Gossett Jr., Emily Blunt, Matt Damon, Maya Rudolph, Jon Stewart, Bobby Moynihan, Sam Rockwell, Sebastian Maniscalco, Christopher Meloni, Richard Jenkins, Awkwafina, and Steve Carell.

SYNOPSIS

After discovering she can see everyone’s imaginary friends, a girl embarks on a magical adventure to reconnect forgotten IFs with their kids.

John Krasinski’s masterful A Quiet Place was horror built on the foundation of a strong, believable family dynamic. Here he skews towards a younger audience for a similar tale of a fractured family surrounded by fantastical creatures, but instead of striking terror in the hearts of viewers, with IF he has crafted a film that will fill them with joy and wonder. 

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Not wanting to shy away from issues that have permeated some of the best children’s movies of days-gone-by, from the off Krasinski grounds his fable in grief and loss. It’s a brave opening gambit on which to build a story of colourful characters and magical events, but you can leave the complaints to the professional cynics, because the emotion is delicately handled, and narratively it pays off in spades.

That it achieves this fine balancing act is largely down to the superb cast. You might turn up for the purple thingies, a farting gummy bear, or a glass of water voiced by Bradley Cooper, but IF‘s driving force is the performance of Cailey Fleming. Brilliant in the final few seasons of The Walking Dead, here she runs the full gamut as Bea. Carrying the dramatic moments with aplomb, and thoroughly convincing during her interactions with the imaginary creations, Fleming brings a weight to her character which makes you invest in the story, one which from the outside might seem like a gimmicky summer family-flick, but which turns out to be so much more as the movie unfolds. 

Taking a back seat to her is Ryan Reynolds, who is restrained and charming as the Imaginary Friends’ human liaison. As Bea’s guide through this secret world full of manifested menagerie, he shares countless interactions with the film’s starry-voiced creations, of which Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Steve Carell’s characters leave the most indelible impressions. 

Waller-Bridge’s Blossom, an anthropomorphic butterfly with a penchant for tea, goes on a character arc which culminates in one of the most beautiful scenes of the year. It’s a sequence which sums up Krasinski’s film in microcosm, one which constantly catches you off guard with moments of heart-swelling happiness. 

Sharing more than a few positive similarities with Robert Zemeckis’ classic Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, spending time in the world of IF is also some of the most fun you’ll have this side of Toon Town. There is a bonkers tour through an Imaginary Friends retirement home which feels like an experimental night at Glastonbury, and ends with a smile-inducing song and dance number, and you’ll be hard-pressed to choose who your favourite IF is from the likes of Sam Rockwell’s ‘Guardian Dog’ or Christoper Meloni’s scene-stealing private-investigator ‘Cosmo’.

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Ordinarily this kind of creative overload could result in hyperactive chaos, but held together by Michael Giacchino’s beautiful, comforting and immediately affecting score, Krasinski ensures that the focus never shifts from the relationships that join the dots between the characters, both real and imaginary, or the very human story at its core. 

Another one in the win column for Krasinski the director, IF is one of the first big surprises of the year. Go for the unicorns, dragons, and A-list cameos, but stay for the big beating heart and Cailey Fleming’s star-making performance. It will leave you glowing. 

Flickering Myth Rating – Film ★ ★ ★ ★/ Movie ★ ★ ★ ★

Matt Rodgers – Follow me on Twitter

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=embed/playlist

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‘Bird’ Review: Andrea Arnold Switches Up Her Playbook With a Warmhearted Fable Starring Barry Keoghan and Franz Rogowski

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‘Bird’ Review: Andrea Arnold Switches Up Her Playbook With a Warmhearted Fable Starring Barry Keoghan and Franz Rogowski

British auteur Andrea Arnold follows up her last feature, the poignant, non-verbal slice-of-farmyard-life that is the documentary Cow, with a new member of her cinematic menagerie: drama Bird, an uplifting competitor for Cannes’ Palme d’Or.

With mostly human characters and actual dialogue, in some ways this is taxonomically more like her gritty-as-asphalt, early social-realist work, especially Fish Tank and Oscar-winning short Wasp, which, like Bird, were shot in the southerly county of Kent, U.K., where Arnold grew up. But then suddenly, out of the milieu’s marshy semi-urban landscape of empty beer cans, cigarette butts, domestic abuse and despair, the film takes magical-realist flight and transforms into something unlike anything Arnold’s done before. Thanks to the director’s magisterial knack with actors (especially non-professionals such as terrific adolescent discovery Nykiya Adams, who, as the protagonist, is in nearly every frame of the film), the result is quite entrancing.

Bird

The Bottom Line

Flies high.

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Venue: Cannes Film Festival (Competition)
Cast: Nykiya Adams, Jason Edward Buda, James Nelson Joyce, Barry Keoghan, Jasmine Jobson, Frankie Box, Franz Rogowski
Director/screenwriter: Andrea Arnold

1 hour 59 minutes

That said, at times this teeters on the brink of sentimentality, as if all that time Arnold has spent in the U.S. directing episodes of upscale television (Big Little Lies, Transparent, I Love Dick) has rubbed off and added a kind of American-indie-style slickness to the script — a tidy, over-workshopped tightness that the raw early films and American Honey mostly eschewed. But that may be exactly what some viewers will love about Bird. Given the presence of stars like Barry Keoghan and Franz Rogowski (both of them amping up the Barry Keoghan and Franz Rogowski-ness of it all to the max), this could be Arnold’s most commercial feature film.

Like nearly all of Arnold’s previous films, even Cow at a stretch, Bird takes pains to show all the beauty and the bloodshed, to borrow a phrase from Nan Goldin’s life, of working-class life. That means copping to the fact there is violence, addictive behavior and outright neglect within families, the sort of stuff middle-class folks primly call “bad parenting.” At the same time, “neglect” can also produce self-reliance and independence in children, who in this film are often seen running around the streets by themselves, playing unsupervised, older ones looking after younger ones, inventing their own games like “jump on the disused mattress in the front yard” and so on. All of it is exactly the sort of stuff kids got up to in the proverbial old days, the golden-hued mythical past that was also supposedly so much better than things are now.

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Twelve-year-old Bailey (Adams) certainly has a remarkable amount of freedom, maybe a little too much. She lives in a large, squatted building in Gravesend, a ramshackle property — festooned with graffiti and furnished with furniture that looks like it was salvaged from a dumpster — that houses quite a few people in apartments on each floor, many of them animal lovers like Bailey and her family. On the floor Bailey lives on, she shares a space with her dad Bug (Keoghan, having an absolute blast), an unemployed party animal whose latest get-rich-quick scheme is to harvest the hallucinogenic slime off an imported toad, called “the drug toad” throughout. Bailey’s slightly older half-brother Hunter (Jason Edward Buda), who was born when Bug himself was only 14, also lives there, although he spends a lot of time with his “gang” (really just a bunch of kids) and his girlfriend, Moon.

As the film opens, Bailey learns that Bug plans on marrying Kayleigh (Frankie Box), his latest squeeze whom he’s only been dating for three months. The wedding is set for this coming Saturday, and when Bailey refuses to wear or even try on the sequined, pink, leopard-skin patterned catsuit Kayleigh has picked out for her and her own daughter to wear as bridesmaids, there’s a noisy row between Bailey and Bug that gets a little physical.

Later on, we meet Bailey’s mother Peyton (Jasmine Jobson), who lives in another house across town that seems perpetually full of high 20somethings in the living room. Upstairs in Peyton’s bed, there’s a monstrous new boyfriend named Skate (James Nelson Joyce). Peyton’s kids, Bailey’s three younger siblings (it’s not clear who their dad is), fend for themselves as best they can. Subtly dropped hints in the dialogue suggest Bailey went to live with Bug at a young age, and feels unwanted by her mother. Guilt, anger, recrimination and hurtful words drift all around this family, like poplar tree fluff in June.

It’s a crowded extended community where everyone kind of knows each other and Hunter and his buddies dish out vigilante violence to people rumored to have hurt kids or their friends. But one day, a stranger arrives among them: Bird (Rogowski). Dressed in a swingy skirt and a complexly cabled thrift-shop sweater, the German-accented Bird has a fey, otherworldly quality about him. Like the seagulls and ravens that Bailey is drawn to and often films on her cellphone (clearly she’s a budding filmmaker), Bird is enigmatic, itinerant, restless and fundamentally other. After doing a charming, flappy dance around a field for Bailey’s camera, he flounces off to town to look for his parents in a tower block. Gradually, he and Bailey become friends — or as much as two wild creatures of different species can be friends.

Arnold starts dropping little hints early on that some supernatural or fantastical force is at work here, and it would spoil the movie to reveal too much. It all gets quite plot-heavy for an Arnold film. For example, nothing much at all happens in American Honey for massive stretches, which was charming and tedious in equal measures. This one has last-minute dashes to stop people leaving on trains, a melodramatic backstory reveal, and even visual-effects-generated surprises involving visits from yet more members of the animal kingdom. (Spoiler: It’s an adorable fox!) Indeed, throughout, there are shots of bees, butterflies, crows and all manner of urban beasties, underscoring the fecundity of the Kentish landscape: a compellingly primal mix of wild estuarine marshes with factories, beaches fringed with lurid amusement arcades and unattractive attractions, a sense of faded, sticky and sand-flecked splendor gone to seed.

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And yet, despite the palpable darkness in the corners of the story and the pervasive sense of melancholy, the film ends on a gloriously optimistic, cotton-candy-scented note of joy. Nearly the whole ensemble enjoys a line dance to “Cotton Eye Joe,” a needle drop almost as good as the opening electric-scooter ride sequence set to Fontaines DC’s punky, atonal song “Too Real.” As per usual, Arnold picks a killer soundtrack, and she loves to get her cast dancing.

Keoghan, of course, obliges, offering a little throwback to his end-reel naked romp in Saltburn. (A character can be heard at one point dissing that viral moment’s backing track, “Murder on the Dance Floor,” only for another character to confess he loves that song.) Rogowski, who threw a mean shape or two in such films as Disco Boy and Passages, also contributes a very physical performance, cavorting around Gravesend like a shy woodland faun or fowl. It’s enough to send an audience out feeling giddy and a smidge weepy in the best sort of way.

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Guruvayoor Ambalanadayil movie review: This Prithviraj Sukumaran, Basil Joseph-starrer is a total laugh riot

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Guruvayoor Ambalanadayil movie review: This Prithviraj Sukumaran, Basil Joseph-starrer is a total laugh riot

When there is a wedding, there are obviously several families involved, a tense bride and groom, friends who provide emotional support, and relatives and others trying to resolve the numerous issues that crop up as the wedding nears. Director Vipin Das’ Guruvayoor Ambalanadayil involves all that along with copious amounts of humour added to the proceedings. Also read | Aadujeevitham The Goat Life movie review: Prithviraj Sukumaran delivers extraordinary performance in Blessy directorial

Guruvayoor Ambalanadayil movie review: The film features Prithviraj Sukumaran, Basil Joseph, Nikhila Vimal, and Anaswara Rajan and marks Yogi Babu’s debut in Malayalam cinema.

The director’s previous film Jaya Jaya Jaya Jaya Hey also centred on marriage and was a black comedy but this one is a comedy drama that’s centred around Vinu Ramachandran’s (Basil Joseph) wedding.

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The premise

Vinu works in Dubai and after suffering from a heart break-up for five years, he finally decides to get hitched. It is all thanks to his future brother-in-law Anandan, (Prithviraj Sukumaran) who constantly advises him to forget his ex-girlfriend Parvathy and marry his sister Anjali (Anaswara Rajan), that Vinu agrees to get hitched. As Vinu grows closer to Anjali, he develops a very strong bond with Anandan whom he considers an elder brother and confidante.

He soon learns that Anandan has had some issue in his marriage and as a return favour, convinces him to get back with his wife so they can all be one big happy family. However, fate seems to have others plans for both Vinu and Anandan and Vinu’s past life and wrongdoings come back to haunt him right before marriage. A shocking revelation throws their friendship and Vinu’s marriage in jeopardy and everything he touches turns to disaster. What is this revelation? And does Vinu finally get married to Anjali?

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Guruvayoor Ambalanadayil is a Vipin Das-directorial that has been written by Deepu Pradeep. Both the director and writer seem to be in complete sync as the comic caper they have delivered is a laugh riot, despite some of the cliches. Pradeep has written a wedding drama that has humour interwoven beautifully into the situations that arise at every turn. He establishes the comic factor right from the get go and as the film progresses you see various characters being slowly introduced to take the story forward. So if you have Yogi Babu at one point, then you have his office colleague at another.

The performances

While one may say there are too many characters at one point, it luckily doesn’t spoil the narrative of this wholesome family entertainer. As for Vipin Das, he has on board a talented cast who have made this film all the more festive thanks to their strong performances.

Prithviraj Sukumar, who is a co-producer on this project, comes off the back of his serious survival drama Aadujeevitham (The Goat Life) into this comedy drama. The role of Anandan requires perfect comic timing and expressions to suit the funny situations, and the talented Malayalam star has shown that he can deliver in such a role too. Prithviraj has tried to break out of stereotypes time and again and this film shows that he can not just essay roles with emotional depth but light-hearted ones as well. In fact, he seems to have thoroughly enjoyed playing Anandan in this film.

Final thoughts

In Guruvayoor Ambalanadayil, Das has once again teamed up with Basil Joseph with whom he worked in his 2022 blockbuster, Jaya Jaya Jaya Jaya Hey. Basil is known for his restrained performances where the humour comes off his expressions and dialogue delivery. And he is a delight as Vinu, someone who lacks confidence and believes he’s a lion though he’s just a cat. Nikhila Vimal and Anaswara Rajan have smaller but impactful roles while the rest of the large cast deliver what is required.

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Music director Ankit Menon, who has worked with Vipin Das earlier, has scored the music for this film. He has combined some new age beats along with traditional music, like the wedding song. If we saw Ilaiyaraaja’s Tamil song from Guna (1991) being the highlight of the recent Manjummel Boys, in this film it is the Tamil song Azhagiya Laila from director Sundar C’s Ullathai Allitha (1996) that is the highlight.

Guruvayoor Ambalanadayil is a complete laugh riot, coupled with splendid performances, that families will thoroughly enjoy. Prithviraj Sukumaran has another winner on his hands.

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