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Thirupachi
Review: There are many in the industry who make films
with lot of pretensions. Actor Vijay is not one among them. He knows what he is capable of. He knows what
his fans are looking for. So without bluffing anyone, he makes
his films for his constituency.
Though slightly bereft of originality or
newness, his films never lets you down. It has typical
ingredients to make you laugh, dance and sing.
Thirupachi has all that, though in large
doses. It is yet another movie about the hero taking
revenge against a group of gangsters, who are responsible for
his friend's death. Though inspired from the regular ‘formula
Rajni films’ like Naan Magan Alla, Naan Adimai Illai and
Vikram's latest Dhool, Thirupachi keeps up a decent momentum.
The director seems to have relied heavily on
Vijay's mass image and Super Good Films that has made a name for
itself by giving family melodramas has taken the plunge into a
new genre for it.
The movie begins in a remote village in
Madurai where Sivagiri (Vijay), a blacksmith and his sister
Karuppaih (Mallika) share a close bondage. Sivagiri wants to get
his sister married off to a city dweller.
He along with his friend Kannappan (Benjamin)
manages to find an alliance in Saligramam, Chennai. After the
wedding, when Sivagiri comes to Chennai to leave his sister and
her husband, he encounters rowdies and anti-socials who have a
free-run in the city. He wonders why the city-dwellers are
maintaining a mute silence to the anti-socials. In the meanwhile, he also falls in love with
Subha (Trisha).
In a tussle at a theatre in Chennai, Pattasu
Balu (Pasupathy) and Sagadai Saniyan (Kota Srnivasa Rao)'s men
murder Kannappan. The death sparks a turn of events in
Sivagiri's life. He vows to put an end to all criminals in
Chennai and clean the city of rowdyism. The rest is all about
how he achieves his mission.
It is a film for Vijay’s fans who love their
star to dance with energy, fight with enthusiasm and love with
mischief. He does all this in his usual style. Punchline
dialogues, songs glorifying hero find their place in all
throughout the movie. Trisha plays a typical Tamil heroine
appearing only for duets. Mallika plays Vijay's sister while Pasupathy and Kota Srinivasa Rao make
loud noises.
It is a good opportunity for small-time
comedian Benjamin, who plays Vijay's friend. He does his role
well. Also in the cast are M N Rajam, Yugendran and Manoj K
Jayan. Chaya Singh appears for an item number. Music by Dhina is for the front-benchers. The
highlight of this movie is the fast-paced stunts. Perarasu in his debut venture has relied on
Vijay’s action-hero image.
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