![]() ![]() It’s a terrific construct that is usually written for a climatic sequence. You expect sparks to fly, but it becomes a Sunburn Festival with Justin Prabhakaran’s thumping beats (I really liked the songs too, though there's a seriousĭear Comrade hangover). Rappers rock the stage with political songs. The Samuthirakani movie suddenly turns into a Pa Ranjith movie at the rally. With his Poraali Army, Jeeva leads an anti-establishment protest, gathering youngsters - if you’re thinking of jallikattu protests, you are not alone. ![]() He has his own A-Team consisting of Pandi (Barani), Sengodi (Anjali, in a refreshingly un-Samuthirakani character) and a senior communist member, who, admittedly, gets the best lines. In short, he is a cardboard character who just exists mouthing painfully-boring dialogues that are woke and puke at the same time. ![]() ![]() For him, people’s welfare comes before anything. Jeeva (Sasikumar) is a firebrand activist who is consumed by his communist principles. Nadodigal 2 is not a movie, but a culmination of newsreels that has very little movie in it. Nadodigal 2 in Dolby Atmos, you know you’ve subscribed to a customised edition of Apple AirPods, pre-programmed with Samuthirakani’s woke politics that invades your mindspace even after crawling out of the theatre. Samuthirakani films are usually loud and make little sense. ![]()
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