Tuesday, April 14, 2015

It is time for Selfies in Malayalam Cinema

I was initially sceptical when I went for the movie. I expected it to be another 'Neram' or '1983', but what I saw was quite impressive. It is a worthy successor to the great comedies of 80s and 90s in Malayalam. The name itself is a sign of the shifting times, from 'Oru Vadakkan Veeragadha' to 'Oru Vadakkan Selfie' symbolosises the shift in our lives, the tales we tell and in our movies.


The movie begins on a new generation theme with the hero failing hopelessly in his education, a song 'enne thellendammava njan nannavoola' and an attempt to create a short film to launch the hero on his path to tinseltown. Then, there are serious twists and interesting plots which make for a crazy and suspense filled ride.

What I like about the movie is its ability to bring in comedy without being vulgar. This is what makes it the true inheritor to great Malayalam movies of yore and this success is even more appreciable and evident when we see the poor attempts by a star of yore to pull along another movie with his old and repeated line of acting and comedy. V. Selfie uses exaggerated situational comedy, something the great comedies were very good at. It makes us literally laugh out loud and brings out issues that are of relevance in our society today, be it hartal or online fraud or safety issues in mobile cameras. It thus uses comedy to bring different flavours out of a solid story.

The acting seems natural, with even veteran Vijayaraghavan keeping his place as the father of the hero, Aju Varghese does well as the stupid side-kick whose antics land the hero in trouble, Manjima does well as the female lead and Vineeth Sreenivasan does his part comedy part serious role well too. Nivin Pauly deserves special plaudits for his performance where he lends credibility to the academically challenged and happy go lucky but compassionate hero.

The scene that struck me the most was when the hero realised how he had let his father down and rings him up in the middle of the night to seek forgiveness. I was disappointed since I expected an all to familiar reconciliation and "all is well between father and son" scene. What came next was just brilliant and it is moments like these that make the movie original, funny and worth watching. The songs are not poetic or something that deserves high praise, but in this movie, their funny tone and lyrics provide brilliant backdrops and leitmotifs. The art and camerawork deserve praise too for the scenes in a crowded temple, moving bus, hideout etc.

This definitely is a family movie, something that the entire family can watch and enjoy, even if some of it feels unfamiliar and disagreeable. That is because the movie is at its core a good comedy rooted in the present- hence unfamiliar to some, and comedy must always be exaggerated- hence it cannot be natural. Expect to laugh a lot, keep singing or humming some of the silly songs that would stay with you and appreciate a really smart and funny movie.

PS- There are notable similarities with the movie 'Neram', but 'Neram' is not effective in its comedy as this one and is more absurd- a bit over exaggerated.

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