This Place is Taken: movie
Showing posts with label movie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label movie. Show all posts

Saturday, January 11, 2014

Drishyam – Family story turned Intelligent thriller

 

Yesterday I watched what they were calling the best Malayalam movie of 2013, and for once, the rumours were true. It is a wonderful movie, one where the script is the true winner. And backed up by an excellent, but not that expensive cast, and excellent cinematography, its nice to see why the movie garnered so much praise. When I left for the movie yesterday, the plot of the movie was already on Wikipedia, but someone has removed the crucial last bit now, removing the clincher climax.

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The movie depicts how a simple four member low income family from a village in Thodupuzha is faced with a potentially disastrous event, and how they overcome it and stay together and fight the police and law order as a whole, coming out clean on the other end. In the process, they face questions, violence and doubts from the cops, neighbours and society; they lie to everyone, because in this case, the truth would not set them free.  It is after a loong time that I found myself, along with the audience, rooting for the murderers, praying that the police are unable to solve the crime. More ethical points of right and wrong, and truth and lies are dismissed off quickly, because for the family, their family honour is their greatest wealth, which they will protect till the end.

MohanLal plays Georgekutty, a honest ,hard working and self made man. Having only a 4th standard education, and born an orphan, he works in his fields and his local cable television company to earn for his simple family. He believes in hard work, and saving everything, despises any unwanted spending. He loves watching movies, and has learned a lot of ‘life learning’ watching movies of all languages. When confronted with any difficult situation, he recalls from a movie he watched how to solve it. But at the end of the day, his world is limited to his family, he does not want anything more, and is happy providing for them. And his family, may make fun of his stinginess, but love and respect him equally.

Into this small world comes in trouble , Georgekutty’s teenaged daughter gets photographed in the bathroom at a nature camp by a hidden cell phone. The culprit, Varun is the son of police inspector general Geetha Prabhakar ,Varun is accidentally killed by Rani and her daughter when he comes to blackmail them. They hide his body in a compost pit, which is witnessed by Anu. Rani tells Georgekutty about the incident and he devises a way to save his family from the law. He slowly prepares an elaborate and water tight alibi for the entire family, and prepares the family to face any kind of aftermath that may arrived at their door step any moment. He tells them how the police will try to break apart their alibi , try to submit them to confessing the crime, but how these can be overcome if they are well prepared. He then goes around the city, making acquaintances out of strangers, so that they remember his family in case the police question them as well. Just as he predicts, the cops are able to trace Varun’s SIM card, and the cops come chasing the family because an officer saw George driving off in Varun’s car to dispose it off.

In a way, the story is a fight between two families. On one side is George and his family, who live through hard work and sincerity. On the other side is Varun’s family, who are much more well to do and powerful, because Geetha is the IG of police. They start searching for their missing son, and will stop at nothing to get their son back, even when they know Varun has been a bad child. For a mother, her child is the biggest thing in her life. We see how Geetha, first driven by love of her son, and then the mind of a police officer, systematically try to break down George and his family. She is able to make out how George got an alibi for this family, but has no proof which could stand in court. So she orders third degree, that George and family be beaten and tortured to get the truth out of them. Of course, George has thought of that too, and has the media ready to focus on their family after they are beaten up by the cops.

The biggest evidence in the alleged murder is the dead body of Varun, which the police are unable to trace. And without solid proof ,and media coverage, the police has no way to framing the family. The case of the missing Varun goes unsolved, and George is able to save his family. All the officers involved in the investigation are transferred, after media reveals the illegal way the family was treated with violence.

In the final moments of the movie, George still has to go the police to sign the remand register. Because, he still is a suspect. The new SI taunts him ,in his newly built police station, reminding George that he is still not free. It is then revealed that George has hid Varun’s dead body in the foundations of the police station itself, thus sealing the only evidence, and the entire case, in a way it can never be resolved.

What stood out:

  • Story. And Screenplay. It was amazing. The director could have got any actor to play the role of the patriarch Georgekutty. Because the character is convincing and solid. i am not a MohanLal fan, so I will not say that he brought in anything special to the role. The character had to look simple, but possess a mastermind.
  • Editing, music. The first half of the movie has familiar naadan sounds and sights, and casual editing of the country side. Just before the interval, the theme changes to mystery & suspense. Not haunting, the background sounds was just enough to hold the audience at the edge of their seats, when every twist was revealed.

What did not:

  • Sexist dialogues. Barely 30 minutes into the movie, there is lot of sexist dialogues, and double meaning talk. For a movie projected and marketed as a family entertainer, these could have been avoided. Due to the awesome reviews of the movie, there were a lot of families lining up for the movie, and this is going to be a sour point. Just MHO.
  • Violent. Again, IMHO, the scenes where the family is interrogated and tortured could have been torn down. But by the end of that scene, the audience is definitely angry with the police for mistreatment.

 

Awesome story. Good movie. Must watch.

Monday, January 6, 2014

Three Action Movies I ended 2013 with

 

Work has been hectic, but I did take a well deserved off in the last week of 2013. Got to catch three action movies on DVD torrent. They were the usual Hollywood action movies with bomb blasts, guns blazing, and high tempo music.

Act of Valor : This movie was released in 2012, but funny thing, I didn't see any marketing trailers to promote it. It could very well be the best action movie from 2012, a high octane action movie about the US Special Forces (SEALS), and a their fictional pursuit of a terrorist and smuggler. It depicts modern warfare, the age of calculated attacks and zero risks. And if the action and weapons displayed here is real, man, the US Army has gone light years ahead of the rest of the world. They have used real Army SEALs for the action scenes, real people who have been trained and seen action. Frankly, the guys can’t act. But you don’t need actors to aim and shoot weapons and go into tactical formations.

Act of Valor poster.jpg

My favourite action sequence is the first one, the rescue mission in the middle of a Mexican rain forest. The last time I saw such an engaging sequence was in the Bruce Willis movie Tears of the Sun. A 7 member SEAL team HALO drop into the jungle to rescue a kidnapped CIA Official. The way they stalk and follow the enemy, the long distance weapons they use, there is also a remote controlled reconnaissance glider, the hovercrafts the second team uses to arrive….mind-blowing ! The extract is done with zero causalities, and Columbian cartel has no idea how hit them. Man, one view and I can safely say, the Indian army has light-years to travel to reach this kind of sophistication.

Captain PhillipsPaul Greengrass’s 2013 movie about the MAERSK Alabama hijacking by Somalian pirates started creating Oscar buzz on release. Now I am not a big fan of Paul’s shaky drunken camera-man style cinematography, it was controlled in the Bourne series movies he directed, but got worse with GreenZone. But anyway, the DVD rip on torrent was of high quality and good sound as well, so ..here goes.

Tom Hanks plays Captain Richard Phillips, the captain of the merchant ship Alabama, which gets hijacked by pirates off the coast of Somalia. The screenplay is tight, the acting top notch. We get to see that the life of pirates and the ship crew are worlds apart. The pirates are driven by poverty to steal, their living conditions pitiable, but all of them surprisingly speak very good English ! Phillips tries to evade, but then gives up when the pirates board, and uses his training to keep the crew safe and the ship unusable. After a lot of cat and mouse games between the pirates and the crew, the pirates are able to take Phillips hostage and escape in a life boat. They plan to hold him ransom for money, not contend with the money Phillips was offering them to walk away.

Captain Phillips Poster.jpg

The ship’s call for help is answered by big brother US Navy, who promptly dispatch a SEAL team to use any means to control the situation. From this point onwards, we know for sure the pirates will be caught/killed, yet it was interesting to see Phillips trying to negotiate and talk his life out of the pirates.

The best scene is undoubtedly the one towards the end, when Phillips is rescued and being treated for trauma on the US destroyer. Tom brilliantly portrays how  the captain is shaken and affected to the core by they ordeal, he wants to cry out his pains, and laugh out of gratitude at the same time, yet he tries to remain composed because he is the captain after all.

Elysium :   Jason Bourne is back, but this time in the future. Elysium is the next of Neil Blomkap’s movie about a dystopian and ravaged future earth, and the story of one man who wants to bring down the corrupted politics. Matt Damon is one of my favourite actors, few people can pull off a action sequence as convincing as him. Matt plays Max, who always questioned the divide between rich and poor, was once a criminal, but now is a reformed wage worker at a robot factory. In 2154, two classes of people exist: the very wealthy, who live on a huge and luxurious Stanford torus-style space station called Elysium, and the poor who live on an overpopulated, devastated Earth. While residents on Earth are policed by ruthless robots, Elysium's citizens live in comfort and regularly use bed-sized medical devices called Med-Bays to keep them free of disease and injury. An accident at the plant exposes Max to a lethal dose of radiation, giving him only five days to live.

Elysium Poster.jpg

Max, knowing his only chance for survival is a Med-Bay, seeks help from notorious smuggler to reach Elysium, and is pursued by Kruger, a sleeper agent played by Sharlto Copey. Max is weak from the radiation poisoning, so he is outfitted with an exoskeleton which gives him superhuman strength. What begins with a manhunt on earth , ends with a one on one showdown on Elysium between Kruger and Max.

Amazing. That’s my word for the special affects. Simply Amazing. Everything from the rich affluent lifestyle depicted on Elysium, to the futuristic weapons depicted, to the exoskeleton powering both the leads, this could very well be the action movie of 2013.

But I hated the ending. Why did Max have to die ? I hate movies which depict a messiah. They could have very well found a way to keep him alive, this is the future, after all. Max went on the fight to save himself, but ended up saving everyone stuck on earth. Also, what about the future from then on ? Can’t the Elysium mainframe be reset to how it was and go back ? Won’t the powers think of something ?

I am not saying anything about Jodie Foster, cause I think her role was wasted in the movie. She did not bring anything new to the table, anybody could have played a female dictator like she did.

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Everything You Were Afraid To Ask About “Donnie Darko”

 

“Darko,” 26-year-old writer-director Richard Kelly’s first film, starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Jena Malone, Drew Barrymore and Patrick Swayze, came out on October 26, 2001. In the hypersensitive aftermath of Sept. 11, the film’s distributor was understandably uncertain how to sell a film whose bizarre events are set in motion by a jet engine falling from the sky. While its critical reception included a number of rave reviews, the film died on the vine, taking in only half a million dollars in its initial release in a handful of cities.

Three years later, “Donnie Darko” is being re-released in a handsome director’s cut, with remastered sound and picture, 20 minutes of new footage and new visual effects. Years of midnight screenings at theaters around the country and the film’s impressive success on DVD — taking in more than $10 million to date in U.S. sales alone — have turned what was once a confusing and oblique failure into a confusing and oblique cult hit. With the release of Kelly’s director’s cut, an even wider audience should have a chance to be bewildered by “Donnie Darko’s” mix of ’80s teen comedy, psychological drama and science fiction.

The film, with its countdown to apocalypse, its intimations of time travel and alternate universes, and its 6-foot-tall talking bunny rabbit, lends itself easily to wildly divergent explanations. Countless Web sites devote themselves to teasing out its many mysteries. In his foreword to “The Donnie Darko Book,” the film’s star, Jake Gyllenhaal, writes, “What is ‘Donnie Darko’ about? I have no idea.” And Kelly himself mentions in the DVD commentary that “this film kinda does need Cliffs Notes.”

And so Cliffs Notes it shall have. I’ve created the definitive guide to the mystifying plot of “Donnie Darko.” Like the junior detectives of Mulholland Drive, I’ve compiled clues from all over the place: not only from repeated viewings of the original and the director’s cut, but also from the film’s Web site, Kelly’s screenplay, the DVD commentaries, published interviews with the filmmaker, Internet speculation, shower-based cogitation, and plenty of arguments with my friends. And I’m happy to say that, after all that, I more or less pretty much understand what the hell happens in “Donnie Darko.”

So if you haven’t seen “Darko” and don’t want the film spoiled, don’t read any further. (The publishers of Salon have asked me to note that instead of reading you might consider blindly flipping through the next six pages and clicking on all the ads.) While I will be including some information from the director’s cut in this explanation, very little of this is true spoiler material, as almost all the additions to the film were previously included among the movie’s DVD extras.

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We first meet Donnie Darko (Gyllenhaal) at sunrise; he’s asleep in the middle of a mountain road. He wakes up and looks out over the valley below, including his hometown, Middlesex, Va. We’re told he is a sleepwalker and never knows where he’ll wake up on any given morning.

We meet Donnie’s family: his sisters Elizabeth (Maggie Gyllenhaal, Jake’s real-life sister) and Samantha (Daveigh Chase), and his parents (Mary McDonnell and Holmes Osborne). An argument around the dinner table reveals that Donnie is on some kind of medication.

At midnight that evening, Donnie is called out of bed by a mysterious voice. He follows the voice to a local golf course, where a big talking rabbit named Frank tells him that the world will end in 28 days, 6 hours, 4 minutes and 12 seconds.

At home, Elizabeth has just returned from a night out — her date honks his horn when she safely gets through the door — when an explosion shakes the house. Donnie returns home the next morning to find his house surrounded by firetrucks and cops; while he was gone, a jet engine fell from the sky, landing directly in his bedroom. His family, relieved Donnie was spared, tells him that the FAA doesn’t know where the engine came from.

The next day at school, Donnie’s English teacher Ms. Pomeroy (Drew Barrymore) leads a discussion of Graham Greene’s short story “The Destructors.” She’s interrupted by a new student, Gretchen Ross (Jena Malone), who asks where she should sit. “Sit next to the boy you think is the cutest,” Ms. Pomeroy says, and Gretchen sits next to Donnie, as would we all.

Driving Donnie home from school, Donnie’s father almost runs over Grandma Death, a 101-year-old woman who lives in their neighborhood. Actually named Roberta Sparrow, Grandma Death spends every day walking back and forth to her mailbox, checking for a letter that never seems to come. As Donnie helps her out of the road, she whispers in his ear.

After a fruitless therapy session with Dr. Thurman (Katharine Ross), Donnie meets Frank again that night. Frank sends him to break a water main in the basement of his school; Donnie also embeds a hatchet in the bronze head of the school’s mascot. School is canceled the next day as a result of the flooding, and Donnie walks Gretchen home from her bus stop. During their conversation, Gretchen reveals that she has moved to town because her stepfather stabbed her mother. Donnie asks Gretchen to “go with” him; she accepts. “I’m really glad school was flooded today,” Donnie says, because otherwise, “you and I would have never had this conversation.”

While Donnie’s parents attend a PTA meeting a few nights later, Donnie sees Frank again, this time in his bathroom. When he tries to touch Frank, some kind of barrier seems to separate them. Frank asks him, “Do you believe in time travel?”

The school’s health teacher, Mrs. Farmer (Beth Grant), seems to be teaching a curriculum derived entirely from a series of cheesy self-help videos hosted by Jim Cunningham (Patrick Swayze). An attempt to get Donnie to play along causes him to erupt in class; he is suspended from after-school activities for six months.

A few days later, Donnie asks his science teacher, Dr. Monnitoff (Noah Wyle), if he knows anything about time travel. Monnitoff responds enthusiastically; for time travel to occur, you’d need some kind of metal vessel, he says, and a time-space wormhole. He lends Donnie a copy of “The Philosophy of Time Travel,” a book written by none other than Grandma Death herself, back when she was a science teacher at Donnie’s school.

In therapy, Donnie reveals what Grandma Death whispered to him: “Every living creature on earth dies alone.” He confesses to Dr. Thurman how afraid he is of being alone, and of dying alone.

Watching a Redskins game soon afterward, Donnie is surprised to see, protruding from his father’s stomach, a silvery, aqueous blob. The blob stretches out and precedes his father as he gets up to go to the fridge; it looks like a liquid snake and seems to be a visible manifestation of his father’s future. Donnie sees his own future flowing out of his stomach; he follows the iridescent snake up the stairs to his parents’ room, where he finds a handgun hidden in a closet.

While discussing a class project, Donnie and Gretchen come close to kissing, only to be interrupted when they notice a fat guy in a tracksuit smoking a cigarette and watching them.

Late at night, Donnie sees Frank in his bathroom again. Using a kitchen knife, he taps on the liquidy barrier between them; Frank’s right eye flashes as the point of the knife hits the barrier.

Jim Cunningham brings his self-help shtick to a school assembly. Donnie acts up again, demanding to know how much Cunningham is being paid to visit the school and calling him the Antichrist. He is hustled out of the auditorium.

Donnie shows Gretchen “The Philosophy of Time Travel.” “I’ve been seeing stuff,” he says, and the book describes the visions he’s been having. “It can’t be a coincidence,” he adds. Donnie and Gretchen try to visit Roberta Sparrow, but she doesn’t answer her door. Donnie looks in her mailbox. It’s empty.

Donnie finds Jim Cunningham’s wallet on the sidewalk. “Now you know where he lives,” we hear Frank’s voice say.

Having kissed for the first time, Gretchen and Donnie go to a movie, Sam Raimi’s “The Evil Dead.” Gretchen falls asleep instantly and Donnie sees Frank sitting near them. Donnie asks Frank to take off his bunny suit; Frank removes his mask and reveals himself to be a normal-looking kid with a mutilated right eye. The movie on the screen is replaced by a picture of Jim Cunningham’s house. “Burn it to the ground,” Frank says.

Meanwhile, Donnie’s family is at the school’s talent show, where his little sister Samantha’s dance troupe, Sparkle Motion (coached by Mrs. Farmer), is performing. They are watched by an enthusiastic crowd and a mysterious woman with a clipboard. (Donnie, having been banned from after-school activities, was not allowed to attend.) As Sparkle Motion performs, we see Donnie torch Jim Cunningham’s house. Firefighters discover a kiddie porn dungeon in the ruins of Cunningham’s mansion; he is arrested the next day.

A distraught Mrs. Farmer visits Donnie’s mom. Sparkle Motion has been invited to perform on “Star Search ’88,” but Mrs. Farmer has to attend Cunningham’s arraignment and cannot chaperone. Donnie’s mother agrees to fly to Los Angeles with the girls for the taping.

We see Donnie holding a letter addressed to Roberta Sparrow.

Donnie visits Ms. Pomeroy, who has been fired. She has written the words “cellar door” on her blackboard and tells him that a “famous linguist” declared them the most beautiful words in the English language.

In therapy, a hypnotized Donnie sees Frank again. He freaks out. When he comes to, Dr. Thurman tells Donnie that his pills are placebos.

With both their parents out of town, Donnie and Elizabeth decide to throw a party. The house fills with costumed high-schoolers dancing to Joy Division. Gretchen appears at the door, crying; her mom has disappeared and she’s afraid her stepfather has found them. Donnie and Gretchen go upstairs. Bow chicka bow chicka bow chicka bow. While they’re doin’ it, Donnie’s mom calls and tells the answering machine that she and Samantha will be returning on the red-eye. Downstairs, Elizabeth asks a friend if they’ve seen Frank.

It’s midnight. A title card tells us that “six hours remain.”

Donnie and Gretchen return downstairs. Donnie sees the future blobs protruding from partygoers’ stomachs; he follows his own to the kitchen, where written on the dry-erase board is “Frank was here Went to get BEER.” Gretchen’s future blob approaches Donnie; he falls to his knees, looks inside it and sees a tunnel of water racing through clouds. He and Gretchen leave the party and ride their bikes, “E.T.”-style, to Roberta Sparrow’s house.

Once there, they climb through Grandma Death’s cellar door; two thugs from their school attack them and force them outside at knifepoint. As they struggle in Grandma Death’s dusty front yard, we see approaching headlights in the distance. One of the thugs throws Gretchen to the ground. “Deus ex machina,” Donnie says as the car approaches.

The red Trans Am’s headlights illuminate Roberta Sparrow, who is standing in the middle of the road reading Donnie’s letter. The car swerves to avoid her and runs over Gretchen, killing her. The thugs run away while Donnie races to Gretchen’s side. Two guys step out of the car: a guy in a clown costume and Frank, dressed in his rabbit suit, his mask off. “Is she dead?” a terrified Frank asks. He seems to have never met Donnie before. Donnie shoots him through the right eye.

Roberta Sparrow approaches Donnie. “The storm is coming,” she says. “You must hurry.”

It’s the early morning. Donnie carries Gretchen’s body back to the house, loads her in the car and looks up at the eerie black cloud hovering over the house. He drives to the mountains where he began the film and sits on his car’s hood. We hear Frank’s voice say, “I’m going home.” In the distance, a black funnel cloud hangs over Middlesex; a tiny plane flies toward the cloud. Donnie stares at the horizon.

We see Donnie’s mom and sister on the plane; there is an explosion and the passengers begin to scream. The jet engine falls through a tunnel in the clouds. We hear Gretchen’s voice repeating something she said earlier in the film: “What if you could go back in time and take those hours of pain and darkness and replace them with something better?” We see pixilated representations of the events of the past 28 days, running in reverse. Time flows backward while we hear Donnie’s letter to Roberta Sparrow. “I can only hope the answers will come to me in my dreams,” he says.

We see Donnie in his bedroom, laughing. It’s Oct. 2 again, a little after midnight. Elizabeth comes through the front door and her date honks his horn outside. Donnie is lying in bed when the jet engine crashes through his room.

Dr. Thurman wakes up gasping. Ms. Pomeroy and Dr. Monnitoff are in bed together; he is awake, staring at the ceiling. Jim Cunningham weeps in his bed. Mrs. Farmer looks aghast. Amid drawings and models of rabbit masks, Frank stares moodily into space.

The next morning, Gretchen rides her bike past the Darko house. A truck carts off the smoking engine. She asks a neighborhood kid what happened and he tells her a boy named Donnie Darko died. Donnie’s mother is standing in the front yard amid her weeping family, smoking a cigarette. Gretchen cautiously waves; Donnie’s mom waves back. The boy waves too.

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What the hell just happened?

The vast majority of “Donnie Darko” takes place in a parallel universe. From the moment the clock in the Darko house strikes midnight, 10 minutes into the film, right up to Donnie’s hysterical laughter in bed, the setting of the film is Tangent Middlesex, a parallel dimension, spontaneously created, which exists only during the 28 days that cover the majority of the film’s action. The through-line of the film is Donnie Darko’s quest to erase the Tangent Universe before it destroys the world.

To understand what actually occurs in “Donnie Darko,” it helps to have read “The Philosophy of Time Travel,” by Roberta Sparrow. This is difficult in that the book is an imaginary one, written by a fictional character. Luckily, much of the book’s text is included on the film’s Web site and DVD and is now incorporated into the director’s cut.

“The Philosophy of Time Travel” explains that time, while usually stable, will occasionally become corrupted for reasons unknown to all. When this happens, a Tangent Universe is created — an alternate reality parallel to the primary universe in which we all live. “If a Tangent Universe occurs,” Sparrow writes, “it will be highly unstable, sustaining itself for no longer than several weeks. Eventually it will collapse upon itself, forming a black hole within the Primary Universe capable of destroying all existence.” During that collapse, a time-space vortex will form that leads back to the birth of the Tangent Universe.

In a nutshell, this is precisely what the hell happens in “Donnie Darko.” At midnight on Oct. 2, 1988, a Tangent Universe is spontaneously created, centered in Middlesex, Va. This Tangent Universe threatens the existence of life as we know it; it falls to one person to do whatever necessary to put the world back in order and keep the Tangent Universe from destroying the real world when it collapses in 28 days. That person — that superhero — is, of course, Donnie Darko: a 16-year-old with emotional problems, a history of arson, and bedroom eyes.

The Artifact

Hand in hand with the creation of a Tangent Universe, writes Roberta Sparrow, is the spontaneous appearance of an Artifact. Made out of metal, this artifact will inexplicably show up near the epicenter of the Tangent Universe; in order for disaster to be averted, the Artifact must be sent through the time vortex back to the Primary Universe — back to before the split in dimensions occurred. The Artifact in Tangent Middlesex, of course, is a gigantic freaking jet engine that falls out of the sky.

The Living Receiver

That’s Donnie, in the words of “The Philosophy of Time Travel”: the Living Receiver. He’s the chosen one, picked (seemingly at random) to return the Artifact to the Primary Universe in order to avert catastrophe. Being the Living Receiver has advantages and disadvantages: You get superpowers, like strength, telekinesis and the ability to see into the future, but you also get horrifying hallucinations and the people around you tend to fear and attack you.

The Manipulated

This refers to pretty much everyone else in the movie. “They are prone to irrational, bizarre and often violent behavior,” writes Roberta Sparrow, because their entire raison d’ĂȘtre is to help the Chosen One fulfill his task. Which is to say that every other character in the movie has been set up like a piece on a chessboard, ready to behave in the exact perfect way necessary to push Donnie toward his eventual destiny — returning that jet engine to its proper time and place in the Primary Universe. Nearly every event in the film, when viewed in this way, has a specific purpose; together the events create an inexorable chain of coincidence and consequence designed to make Donnie’s fate inescapable.

All this mumbo-jumbo, of course, skirts the big question: Chosen by whom? Manipulated by whom? The movie leaves that ambiguous, but it seems clear from comments Kelly makes during the DVD commentary that the person in charge here is, basically, God. When the Middlesex Tangent Universe is spontaneously created, God arranges the people in that Tangent Universe around Donnie Darko in such a manner that their actions lead inevitably to Donnie’s delivering the jet engine back through time.

Deep breath.

Questions?

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Yeah, how the hell am I supposed to know all this? Hardly any of that stuff was in the movie.

That’s true. Many of my friends complain that to understand “Donnie Darko,” a viewer needs to watch the movie and listen to the DVD commentary and crack the Web site. In an interview, Kelly has said that he created the pages from “The Philosophy of Time Travel” as an exercise in interpretation and that they are not intended to be read as canon; nonetheless, his inclusion of many book excerpts in his director’s cut suggests that his feelings on the matter have changed and he intends them to be definitive. (Incidentally, this might be the first time that a director’s cut includes large chunks of material lifted directly from the film’s Web site.)

Couldn’t you interpret this whole movie in another way, without any sci-fi stuff at all? As sort of a subjective rendition of Donnie’s descent into paranoid schizophrenia?

Absolutely. A number of my friends read the film this way and feel it is a far more interesting interpretation of the events of “Donnie Darko” than the dominant sci-fi narrative. Certainly aspects of the film — the flatness of affect in Donnie’s meetings with Frank, Donnie’s increasing menace and the way the mechanics of the plot revolve so explicitly around typical teenage sexual hang-ups — support a reading of the film as Donnie’s Descent, shown from inside his head. Even the careful tying-together of the plot doesn’t necessarily negate this read; one trait of the budding schizophrenic is the creation of coherent, if unlikely, narratives tying together the hallucinations and paranoia often manifested as part of the illness.

That said, I’m not dealing too much with this read in these Cliffs Notes because it seems to me that through his supplementary materials and his director’s cut, Richard Kelly is pushing viewers to accept the primary narrative — the sci-fi, Tangent Universe narrative — as the “proper” way to interpret the film. We can argue all day about whether Kelly’s decision is clarifying or foolishly reductive. Many of my friends think that the film is far richer as an exploration of madness than as an “Escher thriller about freaking wormhole bullshit,” as one friend so succinctly put it. Conversely, I myself am much more interested in watching a clever sci-fi flick with good ’80s tunes than another inside-the-nutcase’s-head movie, and so I’m perfectly happy to have Kelly attempt to clarify the intentions of his plot a bit. Kelly himself has spent years crowing about his film’s careful ambiguity, so I’m interested in why he made the additions he did to the director’s cut, additions that serve primarily to make the film far less ambiguous.

I still think that my interpretation is valid, man.

Of course it’s valid. Don’t take it personally. We’re all relativists here.

What’s with the 6-foot-tall rabbit?

Well, that’s as good a place to start as any. Frank (played, in fur coat and out, by James Duval) is the boyfriend of Donnie’s sister Elizabeth. (It’s he who drops her off just before the jet engine fiasco.) Frank himself never meets Donnie until their fateful encounter on Halloween eve. The Frank who speaks to Donnie on the golf course and elsewhere is a kind of ghost Frank — a remnant of Frank who, because Donnie shoots him in the eye within the Tangent Universe’s 28 days, can move freely in time throughout the Tangent Universe. Frank’s purpose — for he’s been chosen, as surely as Donnie has — is to serve as Donnie’s guide through the Tangent Universe, leading him toward clues and offering tasks that will smooth Donnie’s way toward his goal.

According to Roberta Sparrow’s book, Frank is an example of the Manipulated Dead. Apparently, those who die within the confines of the Tangent Universe are given some level of knowledge of the catastrophe to come and serve to some extent as the Chosen One’s guide. There seems to be some variation in the level of understanding given to the Manipulated Dead; Gretchen, for example, the other Manipulated Dead, seems to have an inkling that something terrible is going to happen but clearly doesn’t have the detailed comprehension Frank does. Nor does Gretchen’s spirit appear to Donnie behind any kind of watery barrier. Nor does she dress up in a bunny suit.

Yeah, what’s up with that bunny suit?

Donnie meets the real Frank — not his Manipulated Dead specter — for the first time on Halloween eve, with Frank in costume. But it’s also an allusion to “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” — just as the White Rabbit leads Alice down the hole into her great adventure, so does Frank lead Donnie into his own. Rabbit imagery abounds in “Donnie Darko,” from a VW Rabbit driving down the streets of Middlesex to stuffed bunnies to a photograph of toddler Maggie Gyllenhaal next to a kid in a rabbit suit to (in the director’s cut) an extended subplot revolving around Richard Adams’ rabbits-in-peril novel “Watership Down.”

OK, I still don’t get it. How exactly does Donnie deliver the jet engine back through time? I get that there’s a time portal or whatever above his house, and the jet engine falls through it, but it seems like it just falls off his mom’s plane for no reason.

I couldn’t figure this out at all, but, thank God, Kelly explains it on the DVD commentary. In addition to his super strength and super future-sight and super sulking power, Donnie has the power of telekinesis. He rips the engine off the plane himself.

Oh. I didn’t get that.

I don’t know anyone who did.

Why does he do that?

Well, he’s basically railroaded into it. Previous events — his conversations with Dr. Monnitoff, his reading of Roberta Sparrow’s book — have made it clear to Donnie what is going on, and he pretty much knows what he is supposed to do. But he’s spurred on most directly by the events of the previous evening. Once he has killed a person and seen his girlfriend die before his eyes, he feels he has no choice but to send time backward — to telekinetically rip off the engine, send it through the time vortex, and fulfill his destiny as the Living Receiver. (Sparrow’s book refers to this as an Ensurance Trap, a snare created by the Manipulated Dead — in this case, Frank and Gretchen — to make absolutely sure that the Chosen One does his job.) Donnie believes that if he does what he’s supposed to, this Tangent Universe he’s in will disappear and it will be as if the past 28 days never happened — Gretchen and Frank will still be alive.

But doesn’t he know that if he sends the jet engine back in time, and it lands on his house, but he’s back there on Oct. 2 in a regular universe with no Frank calling him out of bed, he’ll get squashed like a bug?

Impaled, actually, as seen in a gruesome deleted scene on the DVD. It’s hard to tell whether he knows this or not. His hysterical laughter at the end of the movie suggests he knows something’s up. Sparrow’s book notes that many of the Manipulated will see the events of the Tangent Universe in their dreams. So we can assume that at midnight on Oct. 2 in the Primary Universe, Donnie Darko wakes up from an exceptionally detailed dream in which he developed superpowers, got lucky, burned down a pervert’s house, and discussed the sexual habits of Smurfs with his friends. Whether he understands the dream is uncertain; I think he does but chooses, due to all he’s seen and his worries about repeating the mistakes of the Tangent Universe, to stay in bed and take a jet engine right in the kisser.

Interestingly, Kelly suggests in the DVD commentary that the car horn we hear as Elizabeth comes in the door is Frank’s — that he’s honking not as a message to Elizabeth, but as one to Donnie. Perhaps Frank at that second realizes everything that happened in the Tangent Universe, and knows what is about to happen, and attempts to wake Donnie up and get him out of bed before the sky falls?

Also interestingly, this means that once again an extremely complicated film can be basically explained as being a representation of the dream a troubled character has just before death.

People remember the Tangent Universe in dreams? Is that why we saw everyone looking sad in bed?

Yeah. And Jim Cunningham is crying because he realized what a total perv he is. According to the film’s Web site, he shoots himself 10 days later. The Web site has all kinds of fun tidbits: The FAA never figures out where the engine came from. Roberta Sparrow finally dies in December 1988. And Dr. Monnitoff marries Ms. Pomeroy; when he dies under suspicious circumstances in 1999, she sends his copy of “The Philosophy of Time Travel” to the Library of Congress with a cryptic note. Check it out, but be warned it’s one of those annoying mysterious Web sites that take a week to figure out; look here for a step-by-step walkthrough.

The sexual habits of Smurfs?

Yeah! Apparently Smurfs lack genitalia. According to the DVD commentary, the estate of Peyo, creator of the Smurfs, allowed Kelly to keep this very funny scene in the movie because Donnie’s description of Smurf sexuality is perfectly accurate.

So how are all the Manipulated manipulated?

The Manipulated do irrational or unexpected things with consequences that inevitably push Donnie toward his fate. Consider the film’s climax, the deaths of Gretchen and Frank. It’s fascinating to see all the choices by various Manipulated that get Donnie outside Grandma Death’s house on that fateful night — and cause him to be so devastated by the deaths of Frank and Gretchen that he is willing to destroy the universe in which he finds himself just to undo those deaths.

How does Donnie meet Gretchen? Well, on Gretchen’s first day of school, Ms. Pomeroy behaves strangely, giving Gretchen that not-approved-by-the-Board-of-Ed directive to sit next to the boy she finds the cutest. And then Frank helps them become better acquainted by getting Donnie to break that water main. Remember? “I’m really glad school was flooded today,” Donnie says, because otherwise, “you and I would have never had this conversation.”

How does Donnie know to communicate with Roberta Sparrow? Dr. Monnitoff talks time travel with him and gives him a not-approved-by-the-Board-of-Ed book to read.

How does Donnie know to look in Grandma Death’s cellar? Ms. Pomeroy’s out-of-left-field invocation of the phrase “cellar door.”

The two thugs’ weird idea to rob Grandma Death sends Donnie and Gretchen into the road. Mrs. Sparrow — who’d refused to answer the door when Donnie previously called on her — is reading Donnie’s letter when Frank’s Trans Am swerves around her and runs over Gretchen.

Why does Donnie love Gretchen so much that he’s willing to shoot Frank in retaliation, willing to erase the universe to bring her back to life? Well, because of their deep emotional connection, sure, but also because they just made love for the first time. And why do they make love? Gretchen’s stepdad, we’re led to believe, irrationally attacks Gretchen’s mother, leading Gretchen tearfully to Donnie’s door and into his arms.

And why is Frank there at all? Because he left a party where he could’ve been making out with Maggie Gyllenhaal in order to buy beer, even though the party already had a keg. The behavior of an 18-year-old guy doesn’t get much more irrational than that.

What other irrational behavior do the Manipulated exhibit?

Well, Donnie gets driven to his misbehavior by Mrs. Farmer’s moronic adherence to the cult of Swayze. Said misbehavior gets him suspended from after-school activities; that’s why he can’t attend the talent show and is instead free to torch Cunningham’s house. Once Cunningham is exposed as a panderer, Mrs. Farmer can’t go to L.A. with the Sparkle Motion girls, so Donnie’s mom goes, so the house is devoid of parents, so the Gyllenhaals can throw a bitchin’ party where Donnie gets laid. And since Donnie’s mom had to go to L.A., she’s on the plane when the engine comes off, and … um … actually, I still have no idea why she had to be on that particular plane. That makes no sense at all.

Oh, and of course, everyone thought Sam Raimi was crazy when he made “The Evil Dead,” but he irrationally did it anyway, and that movie was Donnie’s and Gretchen’s only date.

Thanks, jackass. Who are the fat guy in the tracksuit and the mysterious woman with the clipboard?

He’s one of the FAA employees we see near the beginning and end of the movie. Apparently the FAA is so freaked out by the jet engine weirdness that they’ve sent their tackiest agent to keep an eye on the Darko family.

She is a talent scout for Ed McMahon’s “Star Search ’88.”

What does it mean that Donnie’s medication is a placebo?

This scene, which appears in the director’s cut, is another hint from Kelly that he doesn’t think Donnie’s crazy. Dr. Thurman doesn’t fully understand what’s going on, but like so many of the other characters, she recognizes that something momentous is in the air and that Donnie seems to be in the middle of it, whatever it is.

What’s the story with “cellar door”?

Ms. Pomeroy’s vague attribution of the quote to a “famous linguist” was, I assume, mandated by the legal department; it’s hard to get a handle on who first claimed those two words to be the most beautiful in the English language. I’ve seen it attributed to Pound, Poe, Tolkien, Mencken and a Chinese student of Mencken’s who knew no English.

What does that creepy thing Grandma Death whispers have to do with anything?

I think it’s telling how scared Donnie seems when he discusses her notion that “every living creature on earth dies alone.” As the Tangent Universe draws to a close, Kelly is careful to give Donnie moments of reconciliation with nearly everyone important to him: his mother (in a sweet scene up in his room), his father (in a director’s cut scene in the backyard, one of the nicest additions to the new version) and Gretchen (during the Halloween party). A friend of mine pointed out that another way of interpreting Donnie’s smile as he settles into bed, just before he gets engined, is that he is pleased about the circumstances of his onrushing death. He was afraid of dying alone, without a connection to God or anyone? Well, following “God’s channel,” he has known love for the first time and has been given a chance to sacrifice himself for the love of Gretchen and his family and everyone. He knows he is about to die, but he doesn’t feel at all alone.

What’s with those weird blobs leading out of everyone’s stomachs?

They’re a visual representation of the future, inspired, Kelly said, by watching John Madden operate the CBS Chalkboard Telestrator on NFL broadcasts. Included among Donnie’s many superpowers is the power to see the future. Donnie and Dr. Monnitoff have a discussion in which Donnie asks whether this representation suggests there’s no such thing as free will. Dr. Monnitoff says that just because you see your future doesn’t mean you have to follow it, but Donnie seems to believe that the future blobs represent “God’s channel.”

The film comes down pretty firmly against the concept of free will, at least in Tangent Universes. But that leads to a daunting question…

Why all the rigmarole? If no one in this Tangent Universe has free will — and if God or whoever can make them act irrationally and do whatever He wants — why did this whole scheme to get the jet engine off the plane have to be so complicated? It seems like a stupid way to save the universe, in the sense that anything could have gone wrong at any step. Why couldn’t Whoever was in charge just make Donnie sleepwalk into the hills on Oct. 30 and use his superpowers to knock the engine off the plane? In the whole scale of things, that doesn’t seem more irrational than some of the other irrational things characters do throughout this movie.

That’s the exact daunting question to which I referred. It all seems very baroque, doesn’t it, reminiscent of the overcomplicated plans hatched by villains in potboilers since the beginning of time. (My wife asks: If Voldemort needs Harry’s blood so bad, why do they have to rig the entire freaking Triwizard Tournament to get it? Why couldn’t Fake Mad-Eye just, like, send Harry to the infirmary for a Magical Mumps blood test?)

There’s no good answer to this question — why does God or Whoever make saving the universe so complicated? — other than the obvious one. If saving the universe was as easy as all that, what a boring movie that would make, right?

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Neelakasham Pachakadal Chuvanna Bhoomi–Road not Taken ?

 

I got the chance to catch another malayalam movie on torrent again, Neelakasham Pachakadal Chuvanna Bhoomi, release in Aug 2013.  I had missed this movie due to all the wrong reasons, and by the time I made it back to kerala, it had gone out of the theatres. It was called the first malayalam road trip movie, and those who watched it told me it was a keeper, another one of those new generation movies, no stereotypes, no superstars, and no formula at all.

It tells the story of two guys, who make a bike journey from their roots in Kerala, to the North Eastern Region of India. On the way, they meet a host of colorful characters, learn a bit of life, get nearly robbed, help others selflessly, and even grow up a little. The cinematography of the movie is awesome, all the promos and pics are slick and stylishly shot. But the real hero turned out to be the background music and the songs. You will be compelled to take out a bike and go on a similar trip yourself.

Now personally, I never understood why grown up men go on long, endearing bike trips at all. Was it the destination that mattered, or the journey itself ? The preferred choice of bikes are those old style British thumpers, with 50 year old engine designs , very little mileage and a lot of noise. They pollute everything around it, and are difficult to maneuver and maintain. I have myself travelled on some bike rides with my friends, and what I learned : in the long run, its uncomfortable, and unsafe on Indian roads. And not to mention , expensive. The same trip would work out lot more cheaper if travelled by train (my favourite Smile). But I guess, it is an adventure, simply to break convention.

Anyway, back to our movie. Kasi (Dulquar Salman), wanted to to go on a solo journey, the reason for this is not revealed at first. But his best buddy (Sunny), intercepts and joins him anyway. The best bike movies are told by buddies anyway: Motorcyle Diaries, Easy Rider. After a fun start and joyous ride, they run into another group of bikers, and end up in Puri, a place know to be a holy city, but now a surfing destination. Ishita, a surfer girl from Pondicherry, is smitten by Kasi, but he is not looking for happiness , it seems. The bike boys leave for Kolkatta, running into Bimalda, the leader of a down trodden village fighting against capitalization. The boys contribute in their own way. Part of the story, and the reason for the journey, is revealed in a flashback.

Apparently, Kasi was an ideological an honest college student union leader. He meets and falls in love with Assi, an girl from Nagaland who is in his college under the North East quota. She has had a violent past, lost both her parents to communal violence, and lives in constant fear of being targeted by the same. Kasi himself hails from a well-to-do influential Muslim family, and wants to give Assi a new life. But the death of a close friend, and questions from Kasi’s orthodox extended family forces Assi to leave his life. Kasi is heartbroken, and feels betrayed, both by his love, and his family. He needs something to take his mind off, and what better way to forget, than a bike journey ?

When the duo reaches Assam, they witness the act of communal violence firsthand, and Kasi decides to turn back. But when he contemplates on the journey so far, accelerated with nice weed smoke, he decides to go meet Assi all the way in Nagaland. Once there, he leaves with her, having made up his mind up once and for all.

The first half of the movie is captivating, you are able to connect to the duo riders, and all the other people they run into. But then the story introduces communal and religion and politics into the equation. At least for me, I was not able to relate to these ideas, those bits could have been very well left out. I think the writer was inspired by MotorCycle Diaries, in which Che Guevera came to understand the troubles of his country men firsthand. Anyway, we are back on the road with the riders, and able to complete the remainder of the journey.

What stood out :

  1. Music. OMG. Both the background score, and all the songs have that new age feel of modern Malayalam music to it. Rex master rocks ! For some reason, the guitar seems to be the best instrument to compliment motorcycle journeys (or any road trip for that matter). Rex uses different styles for the different locations and moods in the movie.
  2. Dulquar: He once again portrays a person fighting with himself. Kasi is depicted as an honest and truthful student union leader. He is not easily corrupted by petty party politics. Its hard to come by such a peson nowadays. When every other movie nowadays has smooch scenes and pre-marital affairs, Kasi and Assi are shown as old school, abstaining from such a relationship. Again, it is hard to come by such a couple.
  3. Thrissur !: Hailing from the lovely town myself, it was fun to note that the flashback story was running in Thrissur Engineering college, and various points in Thrissur town. Also the beach is shown, so brownie points for that.
  4. Too many malayalees: The duo travels in North India, right ? But then, too many people they run into speak the difficult language, including Raghavan, the puncture fixer. Looks like we are here, there ,everywhere !

 

The best way to enjoy this movie is with your best buddies.

The at one point, the story depicts the suicide of a student, due to inability to pay her fees. This is inspired by an actual event: in 2004, Rajani, an engineering student jumped to her death for similar reasons. I remember this because this happened during my third year in Engineering college. The incident sparked fire to the already hot topic of exaggerated fees in many self financing colleges in the state. Every college went into long strikes, disrupting normal college life, and the future of many colleges and their students seemed in trouble. Reminds me of the many strikes and slogan shouting I myself participated in, knowing that there was no easy solution to the problem.  Anyway, the four years I lost in college was probably the worst of my life, that time is lost, and I have no intention of going back.

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Ustad Hotel - Smacking good.

 

The DVD version of this new age malayalam movie was released last month, and torrent sites all over have picked it up.  I finally got to enjoy perhaps the other best movie of this year Diamond Necklace being the first).  And my verdict : It’s a keeper. The plot of the movie is fully on Wikipedia. And there are a lot of themes and ideas in the movie which have been borrowed/inspired from others though.

The move is centered around good food, and good times, and feel good music. There are mouth watering shots of signature malabar cuisine, lazy strolls by the beach, and different genres of music in songs and in the background. But at its core, it is a story of relationships. A gentle mixture of the old and new, and about change.

Three different generations of a family are present in this movie, and the rift between them is presented without the usual melodrama you see in normal tear jerker movies.  There is the beautiful story of how five children grew up without a mother, the elder sisters bringing up their youngest brother. There is the rebellious daughter of an orthodox muslim family, who first rejects the boy, and then realizes her mistake late, but not too late.  And then there is Karim’s philosophy that inorder for something to be special , you simply have to believe it is special. A nice borrow from the Kung Fu panda. Smile

The visuals are awesome ! I have been living in the malabar area of Kerala for the four years while I was in college, and I was amazed at how artistically the familiar sights and sounds of the area has been captured on film. The background music beautifully accompanies the visuals without over powering it. The strings beats and vocals in the BGM are a fresh relief from the usual cacophony one finds there.

A lot of colorful characters further enrich the movie. There are some characters here who do not have single dialogue, but still show us why they are important in their roles. The character of Narayan who is a tamil social worker is a gentle nod in the direction of selfless service of humanity.

But the highlight of the movie is the brilliant acting of Thilakan. Nobody else (barring Nedumudi Venu perhaps ?) could have played that character. The moments between Karim and his grandson discussing various ideas of luck, fate and success, sipping sulaimani tea by the beach side really stand out. He speaks the idea that “anyone can fill a stomach, but a truly gifted person can fill the soul” twice in the movie. The first time, it is not meant to register, the second time, you come to really appreciate it.

What stood out:

  1. At the airport, a character mentions that Faizi has a good Mammootty look (19:14). It is actually Mammotty’s son who is playing the character.
  2. Shahaana praises Faizi’s superb dialogue delivery (1:20:58). Good for his second movie.
  3. Most of the female characters in the movie are muslims, and they are fully veiled when they step out of their houses. In the wedding photo of Faizi’s parents, the bride is completely veiled, only her eyes are visible.
  4. The boys start their days playing football on the beach. Football is a fever across Kerala, something different in this cricket crazy nation.
  5. The scene where Faizi brings a live chicken to the GM’s table (1:52:00)  is from the climatic scene in Hollywood movie ‘No Reservations’, where Catherine Zeta-Jones drops a raw steak at the table of an annoying customer.  The next scene where the live rooster pecks on the pieces of cooked chicken gave me jitters, you could say it is forced cannibalism there.
  6. Towards the end of the movie (2:17:54), in the scene where Faizi prepares the biriyani, there is a beautiful piano piece which is a straight lift of Nemo’s theme, from the movie Finding Nemo. The OST of that movie had got composer Randy Newman and Oscar nomination.  The songs in the movie really make you sit up and listen, it’s a rarely found fusion of Arabic and new age rock sounds.

Well now this mouth watering review has certainly made me hungry again, so Im gonna munch on my Diwali sweets.

Happy Diwali everyone !!

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Diamond Necklace : A clean , fresh malayalam movie from Lal Jose

I booked this place on the net just to rant. Rant about what I hate, what I would like changed. But lately I have just been reposting from other blogs. So here goes….

 

If you have not figured it already, I am a  mallu. Yup, Im a keralite/malayalee, from God’s own country. Yesterday I got some rare time to myself. I went out to watch a good malayalam movie: Diamond Necklace. Here are my thoughts on this.

It’s one of those rare nice, clean fresh movies which usually comes out as an experiment.  It has it all: good script, humour, thrill, a little suspense, a positive message, beautiful picturization. And good acting. Yup, real make believe characters who speak real world dialogues. The kind a normal person would speak in the real world in similar situations. And the part I liked best: there are no superstars and no comic side kick. No Jagathy/Jagadeesh/Suraj Venjaaramoodu/Salim Kumar. I would watch any movie without them.

 

 

Dr Arun played fantastically by Fahad, lives a high flying life, enjoying all luxuries money can buy. He lives in high rises, drives swanky cars, enjoys night life and has  a gang of like minded friends.  His philosophy of life is “ I have no regrets about the past, I have no worries about the future. I live in the present”.  Nice . Except that his flamboyant lifestyle in Dubai, which is the 20th most expensive city to live in,  is raking up a high credit debt.  His fellow doctor colleagues and specially his mentor Akka, (Rohini) advice him to change his lifestyle, but he manages to continue living on plastic, even gets an extension on his outstanding credit and flies home after getting them to lift his travel ban. Before this, he falls for Lekshmi, the new tamil nurse who has joined (Gautami) , and dreams of a new life with her.

Once home in Kerala, an opportunity to get rid of his debts presents itself. A marriage into a an affluent and rich family, with promises of a rich dowry, and new influential relatives.He falls for it, and marries Rajshree (Anushree), a village belle who lives in a small world of her own. But the day after marriage, he realizes that he has been taken for a ride. He realizes that the new extended family is actually in poor financial state, and he gets way little than what he had expected. Now he is expected to bring his new bride back with him to Dubai.

In Dubai, he loses his luxurious apartment, car and most of his friends. He has to adjust with some malayalee labour personnel in a labour camp, and each of his credit withdrawal attempts is rejected, leaving him with little money. He sees and opportunity and befriends and moves in with one of his tumor patients, Maya (Samvrutha), to temporarily alleviate the rent problem. And it is here that he sees her “Diamond Necklace”, the one which is referenced in the movie title. Both Lekshmi and Maya find out about his marriage, and he feels his has cheated them both.Now he is at crossroads with his conscience. 

Maya is diagnosed with life threatening cancer, she is going to die anyway, and has no living relatives, except Akka. She would have no use with a diamond necklace. On the other had, his wife’s rich relatives and their expectations poses new problems. And of course, there is the bank who wants their money back. Arun decides to  temporarily borrow (steal) the necklace, and to replace it with a duplicate replacement, pawn the real necklace, and thus buy in some more time for this debt problem.  He steals from Maya at the hospital after giving he on extra dose of morphine.His conscience torments him every step of the way, because he knows he is a doctor stealing from his doomed cancer patient.

More problems. His naive wife discovers the necklace. And thinks this is his gift to her on her birthday. Even boasts to her relatives. Now everyone knows about the necklace. He cannot just pawn it.

It is at this juncture that he turns to Venu (Sreenivasan) for help and advice. Venu intervenes, and gets the bank to write off 40% of Arun’s, debt in the name of global recession. And also an 18 month extension on the balance debt. Exactly how this is possible is not explained. But that is not important. What’s important is that Arun no longer requires the necklace. He can replace the original back, and remove that terrible weight on this conscience.

While he was away, Maya had suffered the effects of morphine overdose, and the in-duty nurse at that time, Lekshmi, is fired. Also Maya, who has now learned the meaning of life, understands that she had no right in expecting a new life from Arun. She decides to leave, leaving her valubles, along with the necklace, to Arun and asks him to give it to his wife.

Arun now legally gets the necklace (which is actually the duplicate he had got made), along with the original. He gives the duplicate to his wife, and decides to help Lekshmi, who had big dreams of starting a hospital in her village in Tamil Nadu. He gives her the necklace, and asks her to sell it for the money she requires.

Maya is shown happy, and contended in life. She now lives in the present, and is shown travelling in India.  In the final scene, Rajshree is shown oggling and fondling her necklace (she does not know it’s a fake). Arun asks her if she has ever loved him, more that the necklace. To prove her  unconditional love to him, she casts the necklace into the sea.

 

There is some really nice and smart story telling here. Aruns dreams living in a house-of-cards comes down in an instant, and he has nowhere to run , as all of his friends ignore his request for help, or are in similar situations. He is genuinely a nice guy, spreads happiness and joy around. Stealing does not come easily to him. On the other had, Rajshree’s relatives take him for  a ride and push him further into crisis.   But he is not able to think straight and come up with a simple solution. Fahad plays this character convincingly.

Lekshmi, Maya and Rajshree are all different women with whom Arun has a relationship. Though he does not want to, he ends up hurting all of them at various points. I specially loved Samvrutha playing the terminally ill patient Maya. Her pain and suffering seemed convincing. And she looks gorgeous !

And Sreenivasan excels in another of his toned down characterization of a typical malayalee labor employee, who has been struggling in Dubai for 19 years. He represents knowledge, wisdom and trust in the movie. Maniyan Pillai Raju as the bank manager is another character I liked.

The song NIlamalare, nilamalare has been playing on my computer for 2 days now. Its melody and classical beats is a fresh departure from the usual malayalam soundtracks of these days.

The movies shows the dangers of not having a strong financial plan in life. It also shows how people make the wrong decisions in life when they are faced with  problems and can’t think straight. Living in the present is not a good idea. You need to really plan out a future. Specially if there are others in your life who depend or look up to you. This is a message I feel the youngsters of this and coming generation need to imbibe. A movie with a similar message which came out last year was Ranjith’s Indian Rupee 

It’s  a must watch movie for all generations of cine goers. Don’t miss it. Its not everyday that you get to see a beautiful story told  in a fresh manner  on screen.