Spoilers ahead…
Read the full review on Film Companion, here: https://www.filmcompanion.in/unda-mammootty-movie-review-baradwaj-rangan
It’s 2014. Idukki. Policemen are getting ready for their first out-of-state duty. They line up in rows before a stage, from where a superior will give them instructions. He does. He also delivers what, in hindsight, will prove to be a big joke. “Use arms only when necessary.” For many of these men, who’ve seen little more than lathi charges, it’s a redundant statement. One of them says, later, “I don’t know how to fire a gun. I shiver whenever I touch it.” Another cop wonders if the Kerala police have been in a shootout like they show in the movies. Even the commander of these men, SI Manikandan (Mammootty), admits he’s never caught a thief or murderer in his 15 years of service. Khalid Rahman’s Unda (the director co-wrote the film with Harshad) comes with a macho title: the word means “bullet”. But the film, for the most part, subverts the machismo we know from the movies.
Hence the gentlest of hero-introduction shots. A pickpocket is chastened but Manikandan doesn’t so much as lift a finger. It’s a marvellous little scene. It satisfies fans of the star. (“Look, our hero doesn’t have to do anything! His mere presence reduces criminals to jelly!”) It also satisfies the mood of the story, which resists action until the very end. The rest of the time, we watch men of inaction. These policemen are shipped off to the Indo Tibetan Border Police camp in Bastar, Chhattisgarh. And there, they are told they have to prevent Maoists from disrupting the elections, which are five days away. This is a movie about waiting for an unseen, unknown enemy to strike. We don’t see the enemy, either, except for a stray glimpse of two men beating up a villager. Otherwise, we keep hearing about Maoists from people, from the papers. Or we see an explosion and sense they are somewhere around.
Continued at the link above.
Copyright ©2019 Film Companion.
Purple Sky
June 23, 2019
Beautiful review. It touched some chords somewhere though I am still not able to identity the sentiment.
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vinjk
June 24, 2019
Thanks for the review! I dont get to watch many movies these days…reading your reviews is a good substitute!
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brangan
June 25, 2019
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MANK
June 27, 2019
The movie was good.Your invoking of Apocalypse Now made me chuckle, because Its such a small, intimate drama as opposed to the crazy spectacle that Apocalypse was. It was an ensemble rather than star vehicle. Mammootty is very good at playing these understated , sensitive guys. Right from the time he put on the khakhee uniform in Yavanika in 1982, its been now 37 years and so many cop roles. He always manages to make them different. Its nice to see his subordinates making fun of him and he himself confessing that he never chased a thief or fired his gun.As opposed to the crony characters that superstars have around them just to praise them to the skies. Its a rare quality that the malayalam superstars posesses that they can effortlessly switch from larger than life star roles to these real life characters. It felt like a film from the golden age of 80’s with its mix of humor, pathos and social consciousness. But Mammootty looks very old, too old to be playing these 40ish characters. He is now what 66?, the good thing is that he has not stuffed himself with Botox and other such things. His face still register the required emotions.
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MANK
June 27, 2019
Oh BTw, My latest post 🙂
https://manksjoint.home.blog/2019/06/25/sorcerer-william-friedkins-lean-mean-balls-to-the-wall-odyssey-that-mesmerizes-in-spite-of-its-flaws/
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