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Mutham
(Tamil)
Starring: Arun Kumar, Charulatha, Sathyan, Jennifer, Madhanpap
Music: Bharani
Screenplay, dialogue, direction: Dr SA Chandrasekharan
Melodious Video
'EMOTIONAL decisions lead to disaster...' is the message (?) of Mutham, directed by Dr SA Chandrasekharan, now better referred to as the father of Vijay. It sure was an emotional decision to make the movie. It is disaster from the word go, not just in content but in treatment and acting as well. As for the viewers, what must have been emotional about watching the flick and enduring a disaster?
Just as he dipped his son (during the early days of Vijay's career) and scantily clad starlets in swimming pools, seas, and ponds, Dr Chandrasekharan makes every protagonist of his — they are a handful to endure — drench sufficiently for no reason apart from some titillation value.
And hey, didn't we forget? Mutham is supposed to be the first digital movie ever made in India. Do we have to redefine 'digital' to mean crass, crude humour, and filter-rich photography, the kind that was dumped years earlier by self-respecting filmmakers. There are some graphic animation but hardly the sort that has vow value.
Joe and Sudha love each other but Joe is an orphan, and Sudha the daughter of a politician, who is about to become a minister. Since their living together is out of question under threat from the villainous father, they and a clutch of friends travel extensively and reach a tourist bungalow in Kerala. On the way, you can hear one of the protagonists making that suggestion, which the film producers on the first hand did not take heed: Yes, the one about emotional decisions.
Despite being warned they stay on, and soon one by one the friends are killed. Finally, Arun and Charulatha are left to learn the grim details about their friends' death, and also to learn, along with the audiences, that Dr Chandrasekharan wisdom: "Emotional blah, blah, blah..."
The film lacks grace, punch or novelty. The songs may have some value on their own but watching them in the film is pretty tedious a task. If painting a wash of outrageous colours is creative choreography, forgive the world's ignorance.
A clearly unimaginative piece of work, Mutham denies rightful fame to the rightfully 'digital' movies to be made in India, and ends up as a sad foot-note in Tamil film history. |