Thoondil - Movie Review !
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Adhiyaman takes a familiar plot – the triangle – and adds a new element to it: child custody. The focus is not whether Divya, the ex-lover, reunite with Shaam but will the parents reunite with their child. The director builds the suspense carefully in the first half. The flashback romance between Shaam and Divya is entertaining. The dialogues deftly illustrate the points the director wants to make, especially in a lighter vein when, through Shaam, he makes fun of Sandhya’s nose and Divya’s height! Shaam is in his element as the hero torn between two women. We’ve already witnessed how sensuous Divya was in Polladavan, and in Thoondil, she is even sexier and appealing. She is pure eye candy in the beach song sequence. Though the film’s villain (or should one say, villy?), Divya plays her character sympathetically. Sandhya sparkles as long as she is the young wife; one she turns the young mother, she is mostly teary-eyed and sad, and her sadness weighs down the film.
Once the movie gets a little heavy, Vivek steps in to bring us some comic relief with his running gag of wooing snazzy London girls in his Nattamai Vijaykumar getup! Revathy is competent. Kaviyarasu’s camera uses the London locales interesting, but for some strange reason, the scenes look grainy, and lack clarity. Abhishek Ray, making his debut as music composer, hasn’t done a bad job at all, coming up with at least two memorable songs. However, the background score is noisy, overly melodramatic, with a lot of screaming violins. Overall, director Adhiyaman’s Thoondil begins promisingly but then turns unsatisfying as it fritters out.
Verdict: If you’re seeing it, see it for Divya.