Saturday, March 6, 2010

Thambikku Indha Ooru Movie review

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Cast: Bharath, Sana Khan, Madalasa Sharma, Prabhu, Vivek as Parasuram Naidu,Ranjith, Sampath Raj, Livingston, Aarthi
Director: Badri
Producer: J.Saravanan, C.Baskar
Music Director: Dharan
Lyricst: Kabilan
Singers : Suchitra, Blaaze, Hariharan, Shreya Ghoshal, Naresh Iyer , Benny Dayal,Mukesh

Overloaded promos, Bharath’s viral marketing about his new makeovers and dozens of yesteryear actors in the posters. Maybe , it could’ve let you draw a brief perception that director Badri has crafted out an interesting commercial entertainer.

But, as you walk out of theatres, it’s a mere disappointment. The film doesn’t boast about anything special as director Badri has coalesces whole lot of ingredients from whole lot of Tamil films presenting with Tollywood-fangled touch. More than all Bharath’s unbearable gestures that often annoys us to a greater extent.

Making it simple! ‘Thambikku Indha Ooru’ doesn’t even posses a single attribute to praise about.
The film is about Akil (Bharath) owning a South Indian restaurant in Singapore with a sidekick Kumar (Vivek). When his father (Nizhalgal Ravi) arranges marriage with Priya (Madhalasa), their family friend, Akil doesn’t accept the proposal saying that he has fallen in love with a squash champion Divya (Sana Khan ).

Now, a secret breaks out that Akil is an orphan. But then, the foster reveals that his biological parents are still alive somewhere near outskirts of Chennai. On the course of searching for his parents, he also tries to convince Divya’s dad, which isn’t an easy thing to accomplish with. Meanwhile, he comes across a hooligan Kumaraswamy (Prabhu).

With the intentions of mingling so many plots, Badri tests your patience irksomely.
Nothing much to analyze on the film’s narrative or technical aspects. The only hope was Dharan, who had delivered some good tunes in the past, but dashes down our hopes. The cinematography looks is over-bleached at many sequences and editing is quite amateur.

Bharath has to strictly undergo a crash course in acting. If he has plans about sustaining his presence in film industry, he must get serious and not so careless. Choosing a right script, underplaying his role would surely win him credits as he has the ability to do it. Sana Khan and Madhalasa are meant for nothing while Prabhu’s involvement for the sake of monetary gains isn’t worth appreciable. Vivek’s ridiculous comedy tracks are stereotyped and may not receive felicitations.

Finally, ‘Thambikku Indha Ooru’ has no chances of surviving at box office and has nothing to offer for audiences.
What works:Nothing special to mention, few stunts…
What doesn’t work: caricatured roles, Bharath’s imitation of mass actors, music, camera and other technical departments.