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EDITOR'S PICK
'Kanchana
2': weak film in the franchise (IANS Movie Review)
Rating:
**1/2
With the 'Kanchana' franchise, which is now about eight years old,
Lawrencce had opened the floodgates to several successful horror-comedies in
Tamil cinema. The first two parts worked because it was the beginning of a trend
and the audience dug the films, but slowly as filmmakers started milking dry
this genre, something innovative was expected and that was missing in Raghava
Lawrencce-directed 'Kanchana 2', the latest installment from the
franchise.
The movie, which follows a very cliched and dated format of horror template,
suffers heavily due to the lack of a good story. Forget great acting, which you
really can't expect from these films as their sole intention is to scare with
sound and the ghost element. But we've had so many horror films of late; you
wish these films offered better thrills! Some of these films have had great
comedy, but slowly the jokes too are failing to keep us entertained. A possessed
character beating some innocent characters is not funny anymore.
If it was a transgender, played so fittingly by Sarath Kumar, who swore to
avenge her killers in 'Kanchana'; it's a disabled character yearning
for revenge as a ghost in 'Kanchana 2'. Lately, all horror stories
have been mostly about revenge, and sadly they've all been loud, over-the-top
and extremely passe, though they've been successful at the same time. Maybe
that's why Tamil filmmakers continue to make more horror-comedies, which makes a
great combination, provided one knows how to make a genuinely entertaining film
that scares and entertains equally.
Raghava plays a cameraman in a television company in 'Kanchana 2', and
typically you expect the envelope to be pushed in the sequel, and it is here and
how. Here's an adult man who wears diapers, pins slippers and brooms on his
bedroom wall to ward off ghosts and sleeps under layers of bed sheets with
images of different gods. The makers believe that the idea of pushing the
envelope is making the lead character dumber and more likeable. It looked funny
when Raghava came running and jumped onto his mother's hip at the mention of a
mere ghost in the last part, but now it seriously isn't.
The addition of Taapsee and Nitya Menen to the cast hardly makes any difference.
Initially, the former impresses when she gets possessed but despite the effort
Nitya has put into making her disable character called Ganga stand out, you wish
the writing was better; you wish Lawrencce hired a writing partner instead of
matching steps with his brother in an introduction song for the ghosts.
There are about five ghosts in 'Kanchana 2', and Lawrencce gets to
play all of them. This only proves that he can play any number of characters
sans adding any value to the story. The visual effects are pitiful, and the
climatic fight between two ghosts is a bad rip-off of the most popular series of
Hulk versus Superman fights on Youtube.
'Kanchana 3' is hinted at the end, and let's hope it isn't as bad as 'Kanchana 2', which is undoubtedly a weak film in the franchise.
) Actor-filmmaker Raghava Lawrencce is in no mood to end the highly popular and successful "Muni" horror franchise as he has announced a sequel which will be bankrolled by Sun Pictures.Read More
'Kanchana 2' a blockbuster, collects over Rs.100 croreActor-filmmaker Ragava Lawrencce's Tamil horror comedy "Kanchana 2", which recently completed a 50-day run in cinemas, has grossed over Rs.100 crore at the box office worldwide.Read More