http://idlebrain.com/research/ramblings/ramblings-yemayachesave.html



 



  







Honesty is an undermined, undervalued, and an underestimated emotion in telugu 
movies. That, subtlety would often not register with the audience is often 
quoted as the reason for the makers to go with the broad gestures even when 
dealing with the tenderest of feelings. And the amped up dialogues that go with 
the loud tone of the scene automatically makes a mockery of the original 
intentions. While tone-deafness stands on one side of the spectrum, on the 
other side stands artificial, manufactured emotions, that aim less at conveying 
the honesty of the scene and more at spoon-feeding the intentions to the 
audience. While Puri Jagannadh's heroes go for the loudness, Mani Ratnam's, 
answer for the artificiality, when dealing with love. And right in the middle 
of these two extremes, lies honesty. And only a handful of movies - Maro 
Charitra, Geetanjali, Nuvve Kaavali - achieved the perfect balance, where the 
emotions never seem forced and the situations never
 appear contrived, just for the convenience of the story or characters. 
Whatever points of conflict that the characters might have to face along the 
way, are already accepted as the pre-conditions, and the rest of the movie is 
about how they fare, given the hardships. In 'Geetanjali', the terminal illness 
of the lead characters, in 'Maro Charitra', the culture conflict, 'in 'Nuvve 
Kaavali', the friendship-love transition, are all laid out before hand. These 
movies are about how the characters deal with the conditions and come out on 
the other side - successfully, and sometimes, not so. And after very very long 
time, here finally is a telugu movie that honestly deals with love and love 
alone, with a sincerity that is not often seen in telugu movies.One could go as 
far as claiming this movie as a 'never before' in telugu, for the audacity that 
Gautam Menon has taken up, scripting what is essentially a two-character stage 
play, where all that the two roles
 do is nothing but bear open their souls and talk about what it really feels 
like inside and the talk is direct, honest and heart-felt. The characters don't 
just stop at proclaiming their love for each other and start basking in the 
benefits the new found status provides, but they constantly work at - 
break-ups, patch-ups and all - word by word, brick by brick. And the choice of 
rooting the characters in reality becomes a double-edged sword to deal with, 
after the initial eye-fluttering sweet-nothings phase. While it takes away the 
comfort of faux-conflicts that similar love stories take advantage of, it 
offers the benefit of providing a fresh, contemporary, real-world view of how 
today's characters feels about their emotions and obligations, that the rest of 
the world has to contend with too. Here there are no gun-toting, 
weapon-wielding cruel villains to keep the couple in question apart. The 
problems they face are every day life's - age, cultures,
 personalities - and the conversations they have to chip away at them, pertain 
to the same world as the average man. Here problems are not made up or far 
fetched and neither the resolutions, easy and convenient. Menon sets himself up 
with bare-bone issues - culture and personality - and doesn't give himself any 
leeway by making one side evil, and the other noble, and on top of it, focuses 
for much of the movie, solely on the lead couple. There have been movies 
populated with meager characters before ('Yaadein', 'Show', 'Kaun' etc), but 
never before a love story where what works for and against the characters, are 
the characters themselves.This is Menon's movie - Menon, the dialogue writer. 
The screenplay providing just the right platform, Menon unleashes some of the 
most engaging conversations that never feel 'written' and never calling 
attention to themselves. And one particular sequence, lasting a good 10 
minutes, where the heroine for the first time
 reciprocates the hero's feelings, deserves a sound applause. The sequence 
never cuts away, camera stays constantly on the characters faces, while they 
engage in a dialogue that feels real and sincere. And same goes with the 
break-up sequence later in the movie (easily rivaling the benchmark set by the 
hero's profession of love towards the heroine in 'Nuvve Kaavaali'). As the 
movie progresses and the focus grows more and more on the couple, the 
conversations start growing in intensity and delve more into the personalities, 
revealing the underlying complexities of the characters and situations. And the 
challenge to make each and every conversation interesting, and importantly, 
about something, builds with each passing scene and Menon's words grow just as 
interesting. In 'Vettaiyadu Vilayadu' ('Raghavan'), in the first romantic 
interlude between Kamal and Jothika, there is hilarious dialogue, when Kamal 
continues talking to Jothika in quick bursts with not
 enough words in there to make up a full sentence, JOthika asks 'why is that we 
are talking like characters in a Mani Ratnam movie'? And this time around, when 
the situation arises where the characters have to talk about something, not 
just about and around love, Menon raises his game and shows how if the words 
are right, and more, if the words feel right between a romantic pair, the movie 
never needs the use of extraneous characters, unnecessary conflicts, and 
needless twists and turns. Never before have two lovers, in a telugu movie, 
been equipped with words alone, and whereby, never before has a love story in 
telugu felt so real.Three cheers!


      

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