A must watch movie. Highly commendable.

It is unfortunate that many people who have watched this movie consider it an imperfect remake of Cheran’s epic Thavamaai Thavamirundhu. In my opinion, that is the sort of preconception, borne of an urge to describe new things in the light of those familiar to us that can – and has – corrupt(ed) their ability to appreciate Gautham Vasudev Menon’s latest – but not greatest – movie. (Candid admission: I do not deny having acted this way in the past.)

When I say so, I do not blame them. After all, the opening is remarkably similar. A father on his death-bed, a son recalls the influence his father has had in life… Twenty minutes into the movie, the similarity ends. Here’s why. Thavamaai… is a movie about the father. Vaaranam Aayiram (வாரணம் ஆயிரம்) is a movie about the son.

In the former, the idea of the father is central to the movie; it is the theme. In the latter, the same idea exists, but only as a glue.

Many movies have a character who acts as a passive listener. If the movie were a parallel universe, this character represents the audience. Think of the Kay Adams character in the movie The Godfather. The audience watches the movie through her eyes. Another example, though not from movies, is that of R.K. Laxman’s omnipresent “common man” character – who represents the general public.  This character does not need a clear definition. In the 1976 movie Manmadha Leelai, K. Balachander uses the role of Kamal Hassan’s secretary, Mr. Iyer as a conscience keeper – another example of an in-movie audience. In Varanam Aayiram, the older Surya is used in this role.

Towards the end, the younger Surya says, “வாழ்க்கயை மறுபடியும் வாழ்ந்து பார்த்தா மாதிரி இருக்கு, டாடி. இவ்ளோ நாளா இதெல்லாம் நினைத்து பார்ததே இல்லை.” This is the raison d’être for the movie. The events in the old man’s life (including his courtship of Simran, the only event that has been given significant screen time) are incidental to the movie, which is about the son. The father is at various times (pardon the use of the cliché) a friend, philosopher and guide to the son. So yes, this is a biopic, but about the son. Closer to Autograph than it is to Thavamaai.

Surya

After watching Vel, I wrote that Surya is poised to become Tamil cinema’s next superstar. Here is a correction. When Rajnikanth fades away, there will be wannabes like Vijay and Ajith to continue the tradition, in a sloppy fashion albeit. Surya, however, seems to have set his sights on Kamal Hassan. This is the bigger prize; it requires real talent, and there are very few contenders. And he seems closer to it than the competition.

Surya carries the movie on his gym-toned shoulders. I cannot recall a frame in which he is not present. Lesser actors are not capable of such ardor — a Kamal-esque inability to be away from the screen, that is.

The rest

If you didn’t know this was a Gautham Menon, there are a hundred places where you can guess who the director is. For one, the ease with which his characters can throw out names of the educational institutions they went to. REC Trichy, University of California Berkeley. Remember “M.Sc. Maths, IIT Madras”? Or the use of “We made love.” Or the unimaginable “kiddo” appellation. Or the “You look like a million bucks.” Sans these oddities, this movie is as much Menon’s as it is Surya’s. I guess this movie is some kind of thavam for the director – semi-autobiographical. In translating it to screen, and getting Surya to successfully carry the emotional intricacies lies Gautham’s success.

I thought Harris Jayaraj’s re-recording was a let-down. Simran was apt in the wife / mother role. Sameera Reddy didn’t seem one to die for. The actual scenes depicting the final rescue operations seemed superfluous, given the movie’s length.

 

John McCain reminds me of our actor Ajith Kumar. And Vijay too. In a rally today, McCain, who is down by between 5 and 11 points in national polls, said that he might be down, but he was going to fight. He said that Senator Obama might me measuring the drapes to the White House. And added, “My friends, we’ve got them just where we want them.” As if, to do badly in the debates, to get Sarah Palin to prove her stupidity on national television, to spew fear-mongering, spite-inducing empty rhetoric, to be bashed by all sections of the media (including Hitchens, Kristol and co.) and to run a pretty dysfunctional campaign was all part of a calculated strategy (or tactic, whatever).

After doling out flop after mega-flop, our heroes still consider themselves the future of Tamil cinema (vidiveLLi), and make statements about each other. “Yes, my last movie didn’t go very well. So what? The other camp thinks they are better? We’ve got them just where we want them.” Damn, what about the effing producer, and worse, the audience that has to endure the crap.

Pastor Arnie

And then there is this pastor, Arnold Conrad, who delivers this address at a McCain rally

“There are millions of people around this world praying to their god — whether it’s Hindu, Buddha, Allah — that his [McCain’s] opponent wins, for a variety of reasons,” said Arnold Conrad, former pastor of Grave Evangelical Free Church. “And Lord, I pray that you would guard your own reputation because they’re going to think that their god is bigger than you if that happens. So I pray that you will step forward and honor your own name in all that happens between now and Election Day.”

What is the pastor trying to do here? Is he challenging God? That is too simplistic. What the pastor is really doing is to lead people into thinking that if they vote against McCain, they are voting against the will of God. The implied meaning is that “bad things” will happen to them if they go against God’s will. BS!

When discussing God, some of my atheist friends tell me that the problem with religion is that it can be used to coerce people into doing things blindly. When I disagree with them, I do so only on the surface, as it is true that a man will go to any lengths to achieve his aims, and religion is a sacred cow that can be thrown at others in the process to pull the wool over the doubters’ eyes.

© 2011 VKpedia Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha