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--- On Wed, 3/10/10, Vinayakam Murugan <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Vinayakam Murugan <[email protected]>
Subject: [arr] Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa - Film Review - Contrary View
To: [email protected]
Date: Wednesday, March 10, 2010, 7:54 PM







 



  


    
      
      
       
 
Sent to you by Vinayakam Murugan via Google Reader:
 
 
Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa
via Aparna's Blog by Aparna on 3/10/10

 If you are looking forward to reading yet another review that is going to rave 
about this movie, then go ahead and skip reading this post.
Stunning locations & the vibrant colours of Trisha’s lovely costumes captured 
beautifully on camera and, of course, the songs and the background music are 
all I liked in Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa. I just loved the BGM parts that had 
Aaromale and Hosanna.
I had really expected that ‘Young Super Star’ (!)Simbu would be bearable in 
this movie. But no. I didn’t like his dialogue delivery at all. Add to it Simbu 
lip-syncing for Rahman’s voice in Mannipaya and butchering the evergreen ‘Pa Sa 
Ni Sa Ni Sa’ from Bombay even if only for hardly a few seconds! But this is not 
the main reason why I didn’t like the movie.
It wasn’t just the second half or the ending or the scene after scene showing 
Trisha’s confusions either.
>From the moment Simbu sees Trisha for the first time, he keeps ogling at her 
>scene after scene and then says he is in love with her and then all he wants 
>to do is stare at/touch/kiss her. If this is how a love story is going to 
>unfold, then it is definitely not going to appeal to me. Simbu doesn’t even 
>have a convincing answer when she asks if it’s all about her beauty or 
>something like that. He says that there is a magical chemistry between them. 
>But I didn’t find either the chemistry between them or the love story or 
>Simbu’s dialogue delivery when he says that line having anything magical in 
>it. And that resulted in me losing my patience to sit through the second half. 
>A scene or two could have definitely been cut.
Apart from that, almost every line that Trisha says to Simbu has ‘Karthik’ 
appended to it at the end. I felt it somehow made some scenes a bit artificial. 
Coming to the picturization of songs, the similar group dance sequences for 
almost every song were boring. Some of the scenes in the first half featuring 
Ganesh which were enjoyable weren’t there in the second half to act as the 
saviour either.
If only there had been a convincing love story in the beginning and there had 
been better initial courting scenes, I might have liked the movie. I felt the 
characterization of Trisha and her confusions about whether to let go of her 
love or not which have been so painstakingly portrayed deserved a stronger love 
story than this one.



 
 
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