Thirunaal review: This Jiiva-Nayanthara starrer is a romp of rowdies


Thirunaal
Director: PS Ramnath
Cast: Jiiva, Nayanthara, Karunas, Sharath Lohithaswa
Rating: 1/5

Ramnath’s Thirunaal in Tamil can at best be summed up as a romp of rowdies, punctuated by pelvic thrusting, horribly vulgar dances, swing of sickles, spurting blood and a love affair between a school teacher and, well, a lungi-clad goon.

One never completely understands the head or tail of a plot in which the heroine (played here by Nayanthara, and called Vidya), an affectionate schoolteacher from a modest but respectable family, flips for a rowdy, unlettered and uncouth, essayed by Jiiva. His screen name is blade, and if this was not horrendous enough, he keeps a blade in his mouth, and when he spits it, it hits the jugular!


We know where the story will veer to after this with a script that is often crowded with characters and floundering without direction. Thirunaal, however, does have some above average performances. As a roadside rowdy, Jiiva often emotes with flair and feeling, and Nayanthara, though meant to be a flower-vase on the mantlepiece, manages a nuanced piece of acting, conveying with a fair degree of conviction her dilemma in the arms of a man, who is, at best, a societal outcast with a crime on his conscience.

What, to me, appears as a no-no is the kind of extolling that takes place in Tamil cinema -- of anti-social elements. They are put on a pedestal and celebrated to the hilt, and offences like stalking are given a clean chit -- making them look like perfectly acceptable social behaviour. Thirunaal is just one example.

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