I Movie Review - Tamil Movie ( i ) | Vikram, Amy Jakson ,A. R. Rahman,Shankar
Love, Revenge: Vintage wine in new bottle:
The last time Shankar embraced romance
would have been “Kadhalan”, is that right? Well, strike that! As none
of his movies were short of romance, as the “Love” rather played an
important aspect in almost all of his movies. With “I”, we see Shankar
experimenting by rather stepping away from his usual message oriented
flicks to an action cum romantic drama spearheaded by Chiyaan Vikram and
Amy Jackson. Spread over a period of two years, a strict weight regime
from the lead actor, trots around the globe and finally an audio launch
from Arnold, so has I lived up to the expectation? Let’s find out
I :
The Hunchback, the beast, a
bodybuilder, a suave model? The transition by Vikram as Lingesan is
what “I” all about. As a diehard bodybuilder whose only goal in life is
become Mr. India, deviates from his PATH by falling heads over heels on
Diya (Amy). Right, as you sit gaping at Vikram’ s Greek Godish physique
through his body building exhibit, out comes the Amy the diva making us
sit back and wonder if anyone else could have done this role better.
Shankar takes time to establish his
characters, a buildup that rather consumes a lot of time and gets more
predictable on who’s who. Love being the Holy Grail of this movie, the
avid chemistry between the lead pair rather blossoms in a convincing way
and as one might have guessed amongst some of the scenic landscapes on
earth.
The movie itself switches between
timelines of now and then, a part where the sinister hunchback appears
out of nowhere and tortures his victims, the other part where the
Bodybuilder turned model runs smitten over an upcoming diva. With a
little over 180 minutes of screenplay the plotline would have rather
turned dull if not for the occasional humor infused, thanks to the
wisecracks from Santhanam.
The stage is set for a grand finale, a
heartwarming romance between one of the hottest couple around, a couple
of villains licking their wounds to get back their lost pride, so what
happens next? Who is the hunchback? Enough spoilers, watch the movie to
find out.
What’s good?
Most often in a Shankar movie, the
critic’s first impression would be the “Larger than Life”
impression that Shankar leaves behind. But in “I”, Vikram’s flies in and
dunks the ball, and just keeps doing it.
Two words “Simply Awesome”! To start,
“I” is not the movie that brings a character just for the sake of
it, however integrates into the plot. All the hardwork Vikram has put
into has a fitting justification, something that doesn’t serve just the
actor’s hunger but what the fan’s stomach wants as well.
Some of the highlights include the
short yet sweet exchange of Madras Baashai between Amy and Vikram,
the stunning acting sequences from Chiyaan after Interval, Amy sets the
screen on fire as a model, finally though I hate to repeat this in every
Shankar movie; the Songs and its jaw dropping picturization. As again
Rahman somehow keeps waving his magic wand for Shankar movies at ease,
springs life to the movie. PC Sreeram’s work behind the lens, especially
for the shots in China are simply magnificent, also puts justice to the
extensive makeup work from the Weta workshop.
Cast & Crew:
Amy Jackson’s screen presence is just wow. While leaving the cinema hall, one cannot think of someone else in her place, and she had worked really hard to get the lip synch, which is laudable. After a brief hiatus, Santhanam has bounced back heavily, and proved that he’s the best in the business. He shoulders the movie in the first one hour and comes back to provide some comic relief in the later part of the second half. Suresh Gopi has underplayed for most part of the movie and erupted hard when it's required. Upen Patel looks classy and fits the bill perfectly as an international model. Ramkumar Ganesan will remind you the famous Liquor baron and Shankar has extracted what is needed from him.
Although the movie is a visual treat, Antony’s editing department could have spent some more time to make the screenplay a bit faster than what it had been served. At the end of 3 hours, 10 mins, the viewers are exhausted to some extent. The movie features four extraordinary stunt sequences designed by, Yuen Woo Ping (Bike Stunt in China), and Anal Arasu’s three fantabulous stunts are nothing less than a visual treat. Probably for the very first time, the viewers are sticking to their seats when the stunts arrive, on-screen. WETA has done more than a magic to the script and this will open new avenues for Tamil cinema.
Amy Jackson’s screen presence is just wow. While leaving the cinema hall, one cannot think of someone else in her place, and she had worked really hard to get the lip synch, which is laudable. After a brief hiatus, Santhanam has bounced back heavily, and proved that he’s the best in the business. He shoulders the movie in the first one hour and comes back to provide some comic relief in the later part of the second half. Suresh Gopi has underplayed for most part of the movie and erupted hard when it's required. Upen Patel looks classy and fits the bill perfectly as an international model. Ramkumar Ganesan will remind you the famous Liquor baron and Shankar has extracted what is needed from him.
Although the movie is a visual treat, Antony’s editing department could have spent some more time to make the screenplay a bit faster than what it had been served. At the end of 3 hours, 10 mins, the viewers are exhausted to some extent. The movie features four extraordinary stunt sequences designed by, Yuen Woo Ping (Bike Stunt in China), and Anal Arasu’s three fantabulous stunts are nothing less than a visual treat. Probably for the very first time, the viewers are sticking to their seats when the stunts arrive, on-screen. WETA has done more than a magic to the script and this will open new avenues for Tamil cinema.
Why, What and How?
As much we enjoy Shankar’s
manifestation of opulence there are staggering moments in the movie
that could have changed its outlook.
- Of all the Shankar movies, I is the most predictable one; be it the plot or the next to come sequence.
- It’s surprising to see mediocre dubbing in a perfectionist’s movie, all the lip synch between the non-Tamil speakers look haywire.
- At a stretch of 189 minutes, the screenplay clearly tugs along giving out time for ample dull moments, could have been trimmed.
- An age old tested storyline heavily weighs on Vikram’s performance and makes the viewers constantly in search of thrills and perks.
Ergo, I capitalizes too much on Vikram’s energetic performances yet crosses the boundary line in style.
Verdict : 3/5

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