Starring : Aadhi, Sindhu Menon and others…
When director Shankar chooses
to produce films, he ensures that there is some strong point in the
stories. Probably that is how movies like 23va Raju Pulakesi, Premisthe
took shape. Same is the case with <>Vaishali, which has a strong
underlying social, though the entire feel of the film has a subtle
texture of horror to it. |
What’s it about :
Vaishali (Sindhu Menon) is found murdered, drowned in a bathroom tub,
in her plush apartment building. Vaishali’s case is handed to a
disciplined cop, Vasu (Pradeep / Aadi). As Vasu investigates, it seems,
that she had committed suicide, apparently guilty of her extra marital
affairs with another guy. However, Vasu, who was also Vaishali’s
ex-boyfriend, before her marriage, knows that Vaishali cannot be such
kind of a woman, and wonders if hers was a murder. He also finds that
neither Vaishali’s husband, who was out of town that day, nor her
neighbors seem to have anything to do with it. In a twist of events, few
neighbors in the apartment buildings too begin to get murdered, one by
one, in extremely strange circumstances. With animosity from
Vaishali’s father, help from her sister Divya (Saranya Mohan), and with
his own sense of guilt haunting him, Vasu gets too involved in the
case. As a result he begins to have premonition on the next murders,
and tries his level best to stop few. However, he discovers that the
series is of murders is now carried out by Vaishali herself! Why is
Vaishali’s ghost after her neighbors, how does Vasu find evidence that
it is Vaishali who is committing the crimes, and who actually killed
her is what makes this film interesting |
What is Good :
Sindhu Menon is an amazing actress, who can express a wide gamut of
emotions with very few movements. She lives Vaishali’s character to the
T, both in her joyous and torturous moments. Aadi gets a very carefully
and neatly etched character; and he does an impeccable job as a cop
who is caught between reason and belief. He has come a long from his
debut Oka V Chitram, and surely knows his limitations. Saranya
Mohan, as Vaishali’s sister is cute. She might have not been able to
perform upto the level in a few ‘interesting scenes’, but she doesn’t
at least spoil them. Nanda, who plays Vaishali’s husband, has good
screen presence. The other characters too do their parts well, and all
the actors are supported equally well by the screenplay, cinematography
and visual effects of the movie.
|
What is bad: Once is
revealed to be the revenge of the ghost kind of a film, the screenplay
had a chance to make things more interesting, at a faster rate.
However, the director takes his time, and laboriously explains quite a
few things to his audiences before he finds a ‘medium’ to get to the
flashback. While even the flashback is too slow, it doesn’t get any
better towards the climax, ending like any other typical horror movie–
without logic. However, the director comes up with few scary situations
to ensure that he keeps the energy flowing through the second half of
the movie.
|
Technical Departments : The first thing that you will notice in Vaishali
is Manoj Paramahamsa’s cinematography. The work is so good, that the
camera almost becomes a silent narrator in the film. The camera
movements are slow, and the overall texture of the movie is quite
serious, maintained well with decent work from Thaman and the sound
department. Screenplay too is intelligent, in the first half, and
tries hard to stay like that in the second half too, but without much
success. What’s appreciable about the screenplay is that, it takes
ordinary day-to-day happenings (which might have impressed director
Shankar) to drive its point. The Tamil version was titled Eeram,
meaning wetness and the director ensures that there is some liquid in
every scene possible. That says a lot about the kind of efforts
director Arivazhagan had put in for the film.
Editing plays a very crucial part in revealing the story, and is
especially appreciable in the scary scenes. The visual effects team,
along with the art director, creates some very believable graphics too.
There are few songs in the movie, all in the background, and obviously
they have been shot well.
Bottomline : At its length, Vaishali is sometimes painful to sit through, but you will definitely enjoy its visuals and it has got few moments to savor. |
|
No comments:
Post a Comment