Movie - Raavanan (Tamil)
Director - Mani Ratnam
Producer - Mani Ratnam, Sharda Trilok
Cast - Vikram, Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, Prithviraj, Prabhu, Karthik, Priyamani, Ranjitha, Vaiyyapuri, Munna and others
Movie - Raavan (Hindi)
Director - Mani Ratnam
Producer - Mani Ratnam, Sharda Trilok
Cast - Abhishek Bachchan, Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, Vikram, Govinda, Ravi Kissen, Priyamani and others
Music, Background Score - AR Rahman
Cinematography - Santosh Sivan ISC, V Manikandan ISC
Editing - Sreekar Prasad
Art Direction - Sameer Chanda
Action - Sham Kaushal, Peter Hein
Story, Screenplay - Mani Ratnam
Dialogues - Vijay Krishna Acharya (Hindi), Suhasini Mani Ratnam (Tamil)
Lyrics - Gulzar (Hindi), Vairamuthu (Tamil)
Release Date - 18th June 2010
A Mani Ratnam film is not just a film, its an event. People wait with bated breath every time this maverick filmmaker comes out with a movie. Raavan/Raavanan has been his most ambitious and technically challenging project so far. After 2 years of production, the movies have finally hit theatres now in their respective Hindi, Tamil and Telugu (dubbed) versions. And as always, there is the inimitable AR Rahman as a strong support for Mani Saar. But the movie becomes all the more special because of the reunion of the best director-cinematographer combination mainstream Indian Cinema has seen, Mani Ratnam and Santosh Sivan. The duo who gave us mesmerizing visuals in Thalapathy, Roja, Dil Se and Iruvar have returned to give us the most stunning visuals we have seen in a long long time.
Since I know Mani Ratnam makes his movies better in Tamil and his Tamil movies definitely will have an edge over his Hindi ones, I decided to watch the Tamil version first and the Hindi version right after that. The other obvious reason was of course, Vikram who dons the title role in the Tamil version and is a much better and experienced actor than his Hindi counterpart Abhishek Bachchan. Let me make it very clear, Raavanan is not in the league of Mani Ratnam's best works like Iruvar, Kannathail Muthamittal, or even his masala outings like Thalapathy or Agni Natchathiram. But that doesnt make it a bad movie. It is still a great movie and an amazing watch. Slightly better than his last outing Guru.
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Mani Ratnam, who's usually a master of screenplays, has not really impressed with his screenplay this time around. He follows a rather simple narrative with an important flashback coming really late in the screenplay. But his use of scenes and shots to show the inside thoughts of the characters were really good. For example, every time Veera's character is confused due to his ten-headed mind, we see ten rapid cut shots where he does drastically different reactions and emotions and finally comes to sense in the 11th shot. I think that was a fantastic touch. But the punch he packs in his usual screenplays is missing here. It meanders slowly till it reaches the climax and picks up momentum only then. The climax was done very effectively and was the major saving grace in the screenplay. Dialogues by Suhasini in Tamil and Vijay Krishna Acharya (director of Tashan) in Hindi were really bad and were nowhere near the standards of the razor sharp dialogues we usually get to hear from Mani Ratnam films. And usually a Mani Ratnam film will have lots of memorable scenes, but this one has 100s of memorable shots, but very few memorable scenes like the one where Karthik meets Vikram and Prabhu (Govinda, Abhishek and Ravi Kissen) or the entire climax sequence. Other than that, there are not many scenes that you can take home.
Abhishek Bachchan as Beera in Raavan was miles behind Vikram. First of all, he did not suit the role of a tribal hero. And I found his body language and expressions very awkward throughout the movie. Especially after watching a spectacular Vikram first. He was over-doing it and hamming to the hilt in most of the scenes and couldnt give an effective portrayal of the man with ten heads and ten minds. He gave his career best performance in Mani Ratnam's Guru, but this one will never be featured among his best. He was trying hard to do it, but wasnt convincing enough. Maybe if I watched it independently without seeing Vikram, I would have liked it better. Abhishek keeps doing 'Chak chak chak chak' and some random ramblings without any effect.
Aishwarya Rai Bachchan looked like a dream in both versions. She was better when she was dragged through the jungles with minimal make-up rather than in her parts where she dances around with her husband. She has precious little to do other than shreiking and shouting at the top of her voice. Even her character's transformation is not etched out very well. But one should definitely applaud the troubles she has gone through for this movie. She has suffered so much and all of that looks great screen, except the part where she jumps off the Athirappilli cliff. I feel she should have had better scope to perform so that all the efforts she put in by acting in those rough terrains would have been justified. Her Tamil dialogue delivery (as in only the lip part) was not very good. Veteran actress Rohini dubbed the dialogues really well. Ash was slightly better off in Hindi.
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Karthik plays the modern day Hanuman well, with witty one-liners and reactions, and makes a good comeback. But Govinda plays it in a completely different way which is actually much better than Karthik's style. Govinda relies more on his naturally funny expressions and body language through which he amuses us in almost all his scenes. But yea, his weight doesnt allow him to jump around like Hanuman as much as Karthik does. Prabhu is electrifying as Veera's elder brother and gives a rock-solid support to Vikram's character. Watching him on screen is pure pleasure. Ravi Kissen also played the same part in Hindi very well. Priyamani was very good in her cameo. She was slightly better in the Hindi version. In Tamil, since we have already seen her going through a very similar situation in Paruthiveeran, it looks repetitive. Munna was good as Raavanan's younger brother in Tamil. And his Hindi counterpart was not that good. Nikhil Dwivedi was quite okay in the role of Dev's assistant which is a parallel to the Laxman character. John Vijay, who played the same role in Tamil was better off and was much more menacing. Controversial heroine Ranjitha got the most number of claps and whistles, perhaps even more than Vikram in the Tamil version. (Thanks to Swami Nithyananda!!). Vaiyyapuri as a eunuch in Tamil was good but the guy who did it in Hindi wasnt able to create any impact. Then there were hundreds of other actors and junior artistes who enhanced the movie's massive proportions.
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Double Oscar and Grammy winner AR Rahman has given a deadly score, which is nothing new given his track record. But as usual his Tamil songs are far better than the Hindi ones, even though Gulzar has excelled with his poetry in the Hindi songs. But Vairamuthu's Tamil lyrics goes in perfect sync with Rahman's music making the Tamil songs more appealing. 'Veera Veera' is the best of the lot, but was sadly used only during the titles. 'Usure Poguthey' or 'Behne De' is the other best track which has been picturized magically, of which Tamil is better naturally. 'Ranjha Ranjha' and 'Kaattu Sirukki' are oddly placed during Priyamani's scenes where as the trailers showed it as a song which explored the dynamics of the relationship between Raavan and Ragini. Sadly, those visuals and the song is absent from the movie. If it was present, there would certainly have been more depth to these two characters. Instead Rahman opts to use a wild jungli version of those songs as background score in the narrative, which comes quite as a shocker. 'Kodu Potta' is grand and wild, but Abhishek struggles to dance wildly in 'Thok De Killi'. 'Kedakkari' and 'Kata Kata' are equally good. Where as the song choreographed by Shobana, 'Khili Re' and 'Kalvare' establishes the relationship between Dev and Ragini through a sensuous melody. But the best track comes right at the end, when the movie closes - 'Jaa Re Udd Jaa' or 'Naan Varuven' sung by Rahman, which is not featured in the audio album. The background score is brilliant in parts, just okay in some other parts, but definitely not the kind we expect from a Rahman-Ratnam combination. It sounds hurried and compromised at many parts. But since its Rahman, you get pleasantly surprised every now and then. And I think the Background score would sound better once you see the movie again.
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On the whole, Raavanan is fairly engaging, in spite of not having a screenplay, because of Vikram's performance mainly. Raavan failed to engage me because I couldnt connect with protagonist played by Abhishek or root for him. In spite of a poor screenplay and even poorer dialogues, Raavanan scores high on all other aspects. And has to be watched just to see the unbelievable work that has gone into it. The cinematography, art and action has made the movie into a visual treat. And with Vikram's performance to top it up, Raavanan becomes a fairly good movie, even though it is nowhere near being the epic that it was hyped to be. Watch it without much expectations and you may end up liking it.
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Rating -
Raavanan - 3.5/5
Raavan - 2.5/5
Watch the making of the movie, which is actually more amusing than the entire movie itself in the following links.