Release date:
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March 31, 2017
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Director:
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Haneef Adeni
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Cast:
Language:
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Mammootty, Arya,
Anikha, Sneha, Shaam, Miya George
Malayalam
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What was Mammootty thinking when he signed up for this one? There are
certain big screen projects in which a megastar can pull off strutting about to
remind us of his hotness and coolth. A film purportedly on child rape is not
that kind of project.
Yet, that is all Mammootty does in this weird directorial venture by
Haneef Adeni. The Mollywood legend is not The Great Father’s only
preening peacock, but he is the leader of the pride. Here, in short, is what
happens in this film:
Mammukka caresses his beard.
Mammukka twirls his moustache.
Mammukka wears stylish clothes and poses for his daughter.
Mammukka wears stylish clothes and poses for the camera.
Mammukka gazes sexily at the camera.
Mammukka wears a leather jacket and gazes sexily at the camera.
Mammukka beats up people in slow motion.
Mammukka beats up people at normal speed.
Mammukka walks.
Mammukka walks, in the presence of a loud background score dominated by
pretentious English lyrics about his awesomeness.
There is more showing off where all that came from, in the form of imposing aerial
shots, over-stylisation in every department and Peacock No. 2, a policeman played by Arya.
Here is what else happens in The Great Father:
Arya works out without a shirt.
Arya gazes sexily at the camera, his jaw angled just so.
Arya beats up people in slow motion.
Arya beats up people at normal speed.
Arya walks.
Oh by the way, several children are brutally raped and murdered in this
film, but of course they are secondary to the dudes in the lead.
Story? Sara David (Anikha) is a schoolkid who considers her father her
superhero. Dad is the prominent builder David Nainan (Mammootty) who regales
his daughter with tales of the many dragons he has slayed. Mum is Dr Michelle
David (Sneha), who is inconsequential to this plot beyond the fact that she
bore a child who is Mammootty’s character’s daughter. She is no different from that pretty female
cop in fitted clothes who shows up to take instructions from and report to the
good male cop played by Arya, ASP Andrews Eapen.
A serial child rapist is on the loose in Kerala. One day, when he
wanders too close to home, David takes it upon himself to finish the fellow.
His antagonist in this mission, oddly enough, is Andrews. Their conflict is one of the The Great Father’s many
contrivances.
There is worse to come. The fulcrum of the plot is the rape of a child,
but writer-director Adeni did not deem it fit to research paedophilia. The
result is that sexual violence is used here as a prop on which Mammootty and
Arya lean their male ruggedness.
It gets so bad that Andrews and his colleagues – all of them supposedly
well-meaning police personnel – are shown repeatedly badgering a child to
acknowledge that she was raped, as aggressively as they would extract a
confession from a criminal. Repeat: these are NOT evil cops, and their behaviour
is presented as normal.
If that is not offensive enough, we have a psychiatrist (played by Miya
George) whose idea of counselling a child victim of rape is to virtually scold
her and place the onus on her to bring back smiles on the faces of her parents
who are traumatised by her trauma. You would think her own recovery should be
the girl’s priority, but no ma’am, this doc believes otherwise.
Wait, there is even
worse. The mystique surrounding the rapist reveals Adeni’s Christopher Nolan
complex. The villain’s ominous signature tune might have added up to something
in a sensible film, in a cipher like this one it merges with the surrounding
nonsense.
(Spoiler alert, though I honestly don’t know why I
am bothering) We realise while putting two and two together in the climax,
that David has known the rapist-murderer’s identity for a while but did not
report him to the police. This means he risked the life and safety of little
girls across the state in the interests of his personal vendetta. And this is the man the film touts as a
“great father”? Seriously? (Spoiler
alert ends)
It would be a waste to spend time analysing this ludicrous film’s
politics. If you thought Mammootty could not do worse than last year’s White,
the star is out to prove you wrong. The Great Father is below the bottom
of the barrel. What were you thinking, Mammukka?
Rating
(out of five stars): 0 stars
CBFC Rating (India):
|
UA
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Running time:
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151 minutes
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This
review has also been published on Firstpost:
I hate drivers who cut in front of me, forcing me to brake suddenly or swerve to avoid collision. I started noticing that it is usually the taxi drivers who drive erratically. I started to hate and despise the taxi drivers with a vengeance.So much so that I now actively SEEK out taxis on the roads just to scream abuse at them. I find it oddly relaxing and the perfect way to vent my frustration.
ReplyDeleteYou must be wondering why I am rambling on about my 'issues'. I see parallels here. When you seek the devil, you will find it. I see RED when I see Taxis; You see RED when you watch movies. Any movie. Because you have conditioned your mind to look for the frustrating bits. Driving is not my day job, so it won't affect me much. But reviewing films is your chosen profession and you are currently failing miserably at it. Do Yoga. Seek Counselling. Stop looking for the potholes and start driving on the Yamuna Expressway once again ! - All the best (from a big Mammukka fan!)
One last word - The script & screenplay writers are simple folks who cannot weave subliminal messages into intricate plots. When you dissect too much, you end up with molecules and atoms, not stories and emotions!
I just got back from watching this movie and I agree completely with the reviewer. Movies like these are a complete waste of time, energy and not to mention money. It pisses me off that such a stupid, insane, non sensical and illiterate movie was made in the same industry and at the same time as "Take Off" was made. I have the exact same question as Anna, why the f&@! would an actor with Mammootys fame, money and credibility even consider, let alone actually sign on with such a shit project. Last movie of Mammootys I saw was Kasba and now this - thank god there are new actors in Malayalam cinema I can admire. And I hope the people who made this movie never make a similar one again - clearly these guys shouldn't be anywhere near a camera, let alone behind it.
ReplyDeleteAww, an arrogant road-rage crazed 'Mammukka' fan has thin skin! If driving is not your day job, is it your night job?Man it's you who require counselling and therapy. The authorities should keep you off the roads.
ReplyDeleteAnna has just done her job in warning us not to waste our time and money watching for this nonsensical film. Thank you Anna for saying things as they are. The Mammukka fans should write to Mammooty and tell him to do sensible films instead of the foolish choices he has been making in recently. I feel sorry for him because it seems he is out of touch with reality and some unscrupulous people in the industry just want to milk his 'star-image' for all that it's worth. But more importantly, serious issues like child rape and trauma are being trivialized for showing off the macho image of these stars. This seriously impacts the way public perceives these issues. Keep up the good work Anna.
If you had been following Ann's reviews, of late she has ceased to be a critic and more of a moral police. She has every right to raise alarm over the trivialization of rape & cruelty towards women. However, I believe this is not the appropriate forum to do so. The readers of this blog are here for only one reason- Is the movie worth their time & money?
ReplyDeleteThey do not want a lecture in politics, finance or feminist rights. If Anna starts evangelizing in her forthcoming "movie reviews", would you still revisit this site?