Filmworld
'Vai Raja Vai' - good effort gone awry (Tamil Movie Review)
By
Haricharan PudipeddiFilm: "Vai Raja Vai"; Cast: Gautham Karthik, Priya Anand, Sathish,
Vivekh, Vasanth Sai, Gayatri Raghuram, Taapsee Pannu, Manobala, Daniel
Balaji and Dhanush; Director: Aishwarya Dhanush; Rating: **
In
"Vai Raja Vai", the lead actors are named after themselves. Gautham
Karthik is Karthik, Priya Anand is Priya and Sathish is Sathish. We
don't exactly understand why, but maybe Aishwarya felt it's a lot easier
to connect with the characters if their names are already known to us.
It does work to an extent and these are also the most common middle
class names in Tamil cinema.
Karthik is born with the power to
foresee immediate events in his life. He comes out of his mother's womb
with a smile and it takes him two months to cry for the first time. His
father, quite naturally excited at seeing his son cry, lifts him and
seconds later, the ceiling fan comes crashing down on the cradle. It's
the first hint of the boy's superhero power.
Aishwarya handles
these initial scenes quite well without wasting too much time on
explaining the medical condition. She even makes Karthik fall in love
with Priya in just a matter of minutes. It's absolutely fine because
we're spared the torture of sitting through a cliched romantic track.
Half
an hour into the film, we have a hero with extra sensory perception,
happily in love and a secure job. And just when you start getting
restless, Aishwarya plays her cards well and spruces up the proceedings
with a twist. A colleague at work, Pandian aka Panda, played by Vivekh,
introduces Karthik to the world of betting. Panda believes he can make a
fortune with Karthik's special ability, which has made him abnormal to
the world. They bet on a match and walk away with a crore, earning the
wrath of Randhu, (Daniel Balaji) who is the kingpin of cricket betting.
Randhu quickly comes to the conclusion that he could score something
much bigger with Karthik.
The first half is incredible fun and
the fact that Aishwarya has gone shamelessly commercial is visible in
every frame. She handles it quite well and it's a leap of faith from her
first film.
There's a corporate meeting scene in a BPO, and the
executive level managers are talking about sending a few employees home.
They use corporate terms like downsizing. Sathish is handed three
months salary in advance and Karthik mistakes it for an increment and
wants a party. Panda quickly clarifies that he's been given the pink
slip (termination of employment). It's a small scene and doesn't matter
if Aishwarya didn't stick to the corporate terminologies, but she
doesn't take it lightly, which is good on her part.
Vivekh and
Sathish keep the laughs flowing with the situational humour, mostly
riding on one-liners. The scene where Vivekh and Karthik speak gibberish
to make Sathish leave the place is a riot, and is also when Vivekh
holds a placard with a drinking disclaimer on it seconds before actually
drinking on screen.
The film goes haywire post interval. It felt
like Aishwarya got bored and asked someone else to direct the second
half. Some portions are shot on a cruise, and it's undoubtedly the most
disappointing few minutes of "Vai Raja Vai", which gets completed in a
hurry. God knows why, but the way Aishwarya rushed with the second half
is proof of turning a reasonably good cinematic experience into a
nightmare. Dhanush's cameo is a riot too, but adds no value to the
story. Taapsee, Manobala and M.S. Bhaskar feature in worthless cameos.
Overall, "Vai Raja Vai" is a good effort gone completely awry.