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Review of the film Driver Jamuna: The slow-moving yet compelling thriller directed by Aishwarya Rajesh appears predictable but isn’t

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Review of the film Driver Jamuna: The slow-moving yet compelling thriller directed by Aishwarya Rajesh appears predictable but isn’t

Review of the film Driver Jamuna: In the Tamil movie, Aishwarya Rajesh plays Jamuna, a cab driver. It saves the most of the action until the final 10 minutes, which may not be to everyone’s taste in a thriller.

Since her breakthrough performance in the National Film Awards winner Kaaka Muttai, Aishwarya Rajesh has come a long way. She is now at a point in her career where she can confidently star in films that depend entirely on her. One such movie is Driver Jamuna, a clever thriller that follows a well-worn course only to trick viewers with a clever turn. The payoff in a thriller makes up for the otherwise predictable plot.

After the passing of her father, who was also a driver, Jamuna—played by Aishwarya Rajesh—decided to pursue her dream of becoming a taxi driver. Jamuna’s mother is terminally ill as a result of her father’s unexpected death. Despite strong opposition from her aunt, who thinks men are better suitable as cab drivers, Jamuna decides to take up her father’s post. Jamuna receives a long-distance transport one day to drop off three suspicious-looking people. She initially declines the ride and asks one of the passengers to revoke the reservation.

But when they ask her to join them, she agrees. It doesn’t take her long to realise that they are contract murderers on their way to murder a local pastor. Can Jamuna halt the assault and rescue herself? The main plot point of the story is this.

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The kind of movie that takes a while to make sense is Driver Jamuna. It saves the majority of its shocks until the final 10 minutes, which may not be everyone’s cup of tea in a thriller. That doesn’t change the fact that the story shows some intelligence, particularly in how everything is made to appear predictable but only serves to trick the audience with a clever surprise. One of the movie’s great points is the action scenes that are filmed in the car. They represent some of the film’s great points since they are genuinely choreographed. This would have been a captivating movie if more thrills had been woven throughout the narrative.

Although Aishwarya does a wonderful job playing the lead role, the rest of the supporting cast doesn’t really add much to the performance. The first hour of the movie clearly needed more intriguing writing.

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Manjummel Boys: An exciting faith-based blockbuster that doesn’t use religion as a crutch

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Manjummel Boys: An exciting faith-based blockbuster that doesn’t use religion as a crutch

Manjummel Boys toy teases with the concept of being a horror film for a scant ten minutes following the first act. There had been no indication in the last forty-odd minutes that this might possibly be possible. You also hadn’t heard anybody discuss this change in tone in the few months it took for the Malayalam smash, the biggest hit in the history of the industry, to become available on streaming services. However, at that very moment, when the Devil’s Kitchen is mentioned for the first time, you lean in because Manjummel Boys is giving you something that is getting harder and harder to find in contemporary Indian cinema: complete unpredictability.

During a vacation in the Gunaa Caves in Kodaikanal, a group of young men from Kerala discover that one of their friends, Subhash, whose atheism is a major story element, has fallen hundreds of feet into a hole that can only fit one person into. The group finds itself in a life-threatening predicament. The odds of surviving are next to none, it’s pouring, and the police are of little assistance. Nevertheless, the gang perseveres, building a makeshift human fortification around the pit to prevent rains from entering and drowning Subhash. Even though they have no idea whether he is still alive, they never give up. It’s a scary scenario that brings to mind the well-known Thai cave rescue effort from 2018, the Chilean miners’ predicament from 2010, or the Prince tragedy from 2006—which is still vividly remembered by all Indians who were alive during the TataSky period.

However, writer-director Chidambaram briefly upends the story’s comparatively realistic realism when he gets the villagers to whisper incoherently about the caverns serving as some kind of otherworldly entrance to hell. You never see it coming, but Stephen King must have sneezed someplace in Maine. The Devil’s Kitchen, a hillside labyrinth that has claimed several lives over the years, was the moniker given to the tourist site during the British rule, before the Gunaa Caves were named after a Kamal Haasan movie that was made there many years ago.

Some members of the gang search for assistance while others stand guard near the cave’s entrance. They finally arrive at the local store where, only a few hours before, they had bought some munchies. The storekeeper is reminded of them, but the notion of the pit makes her shudder. He says that Subhash is effectively dead and declines to assist them. The shopkeeper grudgingly decides to accompany them back to the location after receiving a reprimand from his daughter for abandoning visitors from a different city who are in need. However, not before gathering a handful of lemons to fend off evil spirits. And this is the moment when the film presents us with the terrifying carrot. However, Even though it would have been entertaining, Manjummel Boys’ decision not to pursue this idea demonstrates the storytelling discipline that has recently distinguished the Malayalam film industry from other regions of the nation.

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Manjummel Boys, like the extremely successful Fahadh Faasil-starring Malayankunju from a few years ago (about which the actor has voiced unjustified unhappiness), doesn’t let anything that doesn’t advance the plot weaken it. Even the flashbacks are sparsely used, conveying more character dynamics subtly than long, wordy dialogue in a lower-budget film would. We avoid wasting time on choreographed dance scenes or comedic relief characters, which are a common feature in popular Indian films, nor do we cut away to their families. Rather, Chidambaram does what any competent director would do when handling an ensemble drama such as this one: he ensures that each of the “boys” has distinguishable characteristics and provides a sufficient explanation of the location’s topography. to the extent that you could possibly reach the pit on your own if you went to the Gunaa Caves tomorrow. Please refrain from.

Manjummel Boys is essentially a faith-based film; it accepts the existence of purgatory, hell, and heaven but never uses organised religion as a crutch to explain what transpired that day. Furthermore, at no time during the movie do any of the characters—and there are a tonne of them—pray for their missing friend’s safety. During the rescue operation, there are no cutaways leading to a church, temple, or mosque; yet, Chidambaram was quite free to choose this route and most likely get away with it with a pat on the back. For example, in his fantastic Thai cave rescue film Thirteen Lives, Ron Howard couldn’t help but include Buddhist monks.

On the other hand, The Manjummel Boys are an inclusive, secular group. After all, this is a tale of brotherhood, of strangers becoming lifelong friends, and of people supporting one another. They get their hands filthy, sometimes literally, since they can’t just sit around and wait for God to work a miracle. The idea that supernatural intervention had a role in the rescue effort is not intended to weaken the relationship between them in the film. It was all down to the utter bravery of these common people; there wasn’t. Manjummel Boys intentionally downplays the significance of religion, if anything. The one and only time a church and priest are mentioned in the film—right at the very end—they are used as just another means of sprinkling praise on human accomplishments rather than reaching for any excuse to give thanks to the Lord.

Furthermore, Manjummel Boys’ occasional forays into horror don’t really rely on well-known religious iconography. The underground prison in Malayankunju, where the main character was imprisoned following a landslip, was designed to resemble a womb, signifying his rebirth. Cinematographer Shyju Khalid’s artistic lighting in Subhash’s purgatorial prison in Manjummel Boys creates a more abstract atmosphere. Following his extraction, the people in the area assemble around Subhash and, in a scene reminiscent of a paganism ceremony, proclaim him to be a deity. Is there a more overt metaphor for the message this film is attempting to convey?

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