Vetadu Ventadu Movie Review
Story
Shakthi (Vishal), is a forest ranger in
Ooty. He is so engrossed in his work that he happens to forget the most
important day in his life, which happens to be his girlfriend, Roopa's
birthday. An upset Roopa calls off their relationship moves to Bangkok
for good.
Three years later, Shakthi receives a
letter from Roopa (Sunaina) asking him to come and meet her in Bangkok.
He meets Maya (Trisha), a fellow passenger on his flight to Bangkok and
they have a gala time.
In Bangkok, he is mistaken for a local
business tycoon who is on the radar of mobsters. He is received by a
team of men who claim to be his entourage and take him to his hotel,
where Shakthi comes to learn that he is a doppelganger of a businessman
also named Shakthi.
Few hours later, people who claimed he
is the businessman Shakthi, now don't even recognise him. As Shakthi
attempts to connect the dots, he soon learns that everything that's
happening around him is part of a sick game that's been played by two
villains - Rajesh Arunachalam (Manoj Bajpayee) and John Fredrick (J.D.
Chekravarthy).
Will Shakthi be able to stop the baddies from continuing the game or not forms the rest of the story?
Performances
Vishal shines in his role and impresses in some excellent action sequences that are choreographed to perfection.
Sunaina hardly has any
part to play while Trisha was reasonably mediocre in her performance.
Manoj and JD were completely wasted in roles that could've sent chills
up the audiences spines had only the director not made them look like
'jokers'.
Analysis
Vetadu Ventadu is the Telugu dubbed version of Tamil action-thriller "Samar",
which is heavily inspired by Spanish
thriller "Dot The I". Quite different from several run-of-the-mill type
films of the recent past, Vetadu Ventadu succeeds in keeping the
audience hooked to a certain extent, but gradually slips into boredom.
If not a frame-to-frame copy of the
original, Vetadu Ventadu does seem to have borrowed the plot from the
foreign film to make it exciting enough to pique the interest of the
regional audience.
The basic plot of the cat-and-mouse game
has been neatly adapted from the Spanish film, but the director makes
an attempt to make the film worth watching with his personal touch,
which deserves sincere adulation. While the original was about a
director who makes a film involving real characters, but here, it's
about two sadistic villains who indulge in sick games involving real
people.
Even though the film does have plenty of
promising moments, but the tension it builds up to reveal the villains, doesn't quite leave an impact as the crooks turn out to be irksome and
extremely artificial. It's sad to see highly talented actors such as
Manoj and JD exhibit buffoonery in the name of villianism.
All they do in their respective roles is
yell at the top of their lungs and laugh as though they were recently
released from a mental institution.
If you want to see a sadistic villain, I recommend you revisit late Heath Ledger's performance as Joker in "The Dark Knight".
While one may find Trisha's part
unnecessary initially but will realise later that she was very much
needed. Thiru's direction missed the deftness of a riveting thriller.
Even though he manages to impress at first, but doesn't produce an
engaging finish.
Final Verdict
Different but not engaging
Film: Vetadu Ventadu
Starring: Vishal, Trisha, Sunaina
Director: Thiru
Producer: Srinivas Damera
Banner: 5 Colors Multimedia
Music: Yuvan Shankar Raja
Starring: Vishal, Trisha, Sunaina
Director: Thiru
Producer: Srinivas Damera
Banner: 5 Colors Multimedia
Music: Yuvan Shankar Raja