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Naan Sigappu Manithan: Based on the Charles Bronson
starrer Death Wish, Naan Sigappu Manidhan offers a twist on the traditional
vendetta tale. Here too, a man loses his sister and his mother to the villains.
But instead of going after the villains to extract revenge, he goes after ALL
bad guys. He turns into a self-styled vigilante, ridding the streets of rowdies
and goondas.
Vijay(Rajnikanth) is a tamil professor living with his widowed mother and his
sister. He is in love with Uma(Ambika), a lawyer. During a visit to his friend
Ravi's('Nizhalgal' Ravi) house, he is disgusted by goings-on in his
neighbourhood. Illicit liquor is being sold at a tea-stall while prostitution is
flourishing in another house in the same colony. But his complaints to the
police yield nothing since the policeman is on the villains' payroll and manages
to warn them before making a raid. When Ravi's sister is raped and killed and
the perpetrator Mohanraj(Satyaraj) gets off scot-free with help from a minister,
Vijay and Ravi take matters into their own hands and clean up the tea-stall and
brothel on their own. Wanting to teach Vijay a lesson, Mohanraj and his goondas
rape his sister(who then commits suicide) and kill his mother. Vijay then turns
into a vigilante, walking the streets at nights and dealing out his own brand of
justice - shoot first and ask questions later - to the rowdies and goondas. He
soon becomes known as Robinhood, helper of the poor and the police sends
Singaaram(Bagyaraj) to unmask Robinhood.
This is not an easy movie to watch. The body count is quite high and the two
rape scenes are long and brutal. The atmosphere is serious (at least whenever
Bagyaraj is not around) and anybody picking this movie with the intention of
watching a light-hearted movie like many of Rajnikanth's other movies, will be
sadly mistaken. The mood of the movie can be illustrated by the fact that two
actors, Y.G.Mahendran and 'Venniraadai' Moorthy, who have traditionally donned
comedian roles, are villains here.
Right from Mullum Malarum, Rajnikanth has shone in roles where he is an
affectionate brother showering love on his sister. Here too, the few scenes he
shares with his sister in the beginning are soft and illustrate their closeness
well. The picturisation of Kanne Naan... is sweet, especially when Rajnikanth
brings in a whole troop of doctors when his sister pricks herself with a thorn.
This brother-sister relationship is surprisingly effective in the short time it
is shown. The romance between Rajnikanth and Ambika too has some nice moments.
The movie is involving and kept moving at a fairly good pace by director
S.A.Chandrasekharan. Rajnikanth shooting down the criminals doesn't get too
repetitive due to the variations in the situations. Background music by
Ilaiyaraja during these scenes is especially effective. The movie also perks up
after Bagyaraj's introduction. With his casual attitude, he infuses life into
the film. Though it is not clear how he shows up at Rajnikanth's college in the
first place and how Rajnikanth seems to know him, his later deductions about
Rajnikanth's second identity are quite clever.
The climactic court scene is completely cinematic with Bagyaraj having fun in
the witness stand. He has some nice lines about how the hands of the police are
tied when it comes to bringing criminals to justice. There is also a scene in
the judge's house which is rather unexpected and somewhat clever. The director
probably had a tough choice to make on the judgement to be delivered. While
arbitrarily releasing Rajnikanth would have seemed like a mockery of normal
judicial proceedings, punishing him would not have been an option since he was
the hero with quite a rabid fan following. He has resolved this rather cleverly.
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