Author Topic: Kodiveeran  (Read 767 times)

Offline MysteRy

  • Global Moderator
  • Classic Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 218307
  • Total likes: 23035
  • Karma: +2/-0
  • Gender: Female
  • ♥♥ Positive Thinking Will Let U Do Everything ♥♥
    • http://friendstamilchat.com/
Kodiveeran
« on: December 08, 2017, 07:49:02 PM »
Kodiveeran  Review



Star Cast : Sasikumar, Sanusha

If director Muthaiah's debut film 'Kuttipuli'  had mother sentiments, the same combo is back again with Kodiveeran, another template village based film.

Kodiveeran's (Sasikumar)  mother commits suicide as soon as she comes to know about her husband 's extra-marital affair but while ending her life, she gives birth to a baby girl Parvathy (Sanusha). From his childhood, Kodiveeran takes care of his sister and treats her like a queen. Meanwhile, Kodiveeran falls in love with (Mahima), who has an upright RDO brother Subash (Viddharth).

Parvathy and Mahima has an agreement according to which they have to marry each other's brother.

Being an honest officer, Subash earn a lot of enemies including cracker factory owner Arasangam (Inder Kumar),  his henchman brother-in-law Villangam (Pasupathy), a corrupt police officer (Boxer Dheena) and local rowdy (Stalin). Kodiveeran agrees to the wedding of his sister Parvathy and Subash but he should also save his brother-in-law from menacing baddies...

The first ten minutes of Kodiveeran is truly shocking with a hard hitting episode but post that the film turns out to be a predictable rural action entertainer. The dialogues are over the top glorifying the mass image of Sasikumar. However, the sister sentiment and realistic rural backdrop are the pluses, The screenplay is outdated with regular elements.

Sasikumar fits the bill perfectly for the village angry man character but he has to change his usual mannerism and body language. Pasupathy as the deadly villain steals the show. Sanusha is pretty and lively whereas Mahima is just adequate and the much hyped Poorna doesn't have any big scope.

SR Karthi's cinematography rightly captures the rural areas but music composer NR Raghunanthan's work is not up to the mark.

.