Rating:
Kabali, as a movie: 2/5
Kabali, for Rajni: 4/5
Took my dose of Kabali! One dose
and the Kabali fever is down.
Rajnikanth- the one and only
reason for many to have watched this movie. It’s always a pleasure and a splendid
experience to watch the SUPERSTAR on screen. No doubt, he has still got it in
him- the style, the smile and the attitude. Every scene of his was a visual treat.
The entry scene! Wish I had known how to whistle. His pose standing at the
gate, the walk, the talk- I have no words to express my excitement and
happiness on watching Rajni on screen after a long time (I didn’t watch Linga!
LOL). His look with the white beard was too good. I wish he hadn’t taken it off
in the later part of the movie. Though I am spell bound by his presence and
speechless by his energy, I don’t have any shortage of words for Kabali, as a
movie.
Yes! I am a Rajni fan. Yes. I
went to watch this movie for him. Yes. I wasn’t disappointed by him. YES. The
movie was an utter mess. A huge dud.

The movie surrounds Kabaleeswaran
aka Kabali, the good gangster (oxymoron?), the messiah of the Tamil people in
Malaysia, who is released from jail after a long sentencing. There is the enemy
gang, 43 (Oh yes! That’s the gang’s name), who is desperately waiting to finish
off Kabali- their only competitor. The local government is sceptical wonderin if
releasing Kabali will give rise to more civil unrest. Whatever it is, Kabali is
released and we have a heavy dosage of Rajni for the next 15 minutes or so. The
narration then plunges into the core of the movie and this is where the problem
with the movie begins. I’ll jot down in points. I think that will add more
clarity....
- Clarity- The primary problem with Kabali is there is absolutely no clear objective. It begins with Kabali wanting to avenge the death of his wife. Then the focus shifts to the foundation run by him. Then it jumps into Kabali’s personal life. And then back to his gang life. As a viewer, I am completely tired of jumping emotions so quickly that at the end, I don’t feel the sadness or the pain of our lead character.
- The Malaysian setting is very hard to connect. The basic problem being the discrimination of Tamilians isn’t projected with the needed depth.
- All the scenes of gang 43 are so clumsily taken.
- Every single character’s loyalty is doubted in almost every scene.
- The movie might even surpass Mount Everest when it comes to melodrama.
Few questions and observations:
- What happened to Ang Lee? Did his 100th birthday turn into his death day? Poor guy.
- Is Kabali’s suit custom made to hold weapons in his shirt sleeve or coat sleeve?
- Does Malaysian jail allow prisoners to watch Tamil movies in prison? How did Kabali know about Vadivelu dialogues?
- Is there a particular reason why villains are always supposed to wear atrociously coloured suits? Dark pink suit and violet shirt? Seriously? Kudos to Tony Lee for even carrying that with a smile.
- Instead of having Tamil subtitles for Tony Lee’s English, there should have been subtitles for his Tamil. I realised he was speaking Tamil only because there were no subtitles.
- Medical Miracle Moment: Kumudhavalli’s mental ill health vanishing faster than Usain Bolt. How? Must be Kabali’s magical eyes is it?
- Yogi and Jeeva? What happened there? Sorry...how? Sorry....when?
- The foundation wants to change the lives of the youngsters, but is willing to use them for their gang wars just because their cause is good?
- 5 bullets and Kabali still survives. I believe it. It’s Rajni after all.
- Who was the actual anointed comedian in the movie? Tony Lee or Jeeva?
Another problem I had with the
movie was the unintentional message it was propagating. Violence. There is
already so much violence going on, especially among youth. 75% of this movie
has just blind shooting and bloodshed. With Rajni being followed so much by
people of all ages, I feel a much more disciplined, much cleaner character
would have been better. Of course, it’s a movie. Of course, Kabali is a
character and miles away from the real Rajni- but how many really understand
the difference?
Coming to the performances,
Radhika Apte and Dhansika have given extra ordinary performances, in par with
Rajni. Apart from that, the supporting cast come across very amateurish.
Moments to look for: Kabali’s
entry, his encounter with Cheeni, the stylish fights, the firework shootings at
the end. Mayanadhi song is beautifully picturised.
Rajni is known for the following
factors and Kabali checks everything:
ü Grand opening scene,
ü Title song singing praises of Kabali,
ü Revenge motive,
ü Sentiment due to losing someone close and dear,
ü Stylish fights,
ü Trademark walk,
ü Victory at the end.
ü Grand opening scene,
ü Title song singing praises of Kabali,
ü Revenge motive,
ü Sentiment due to losing someone close and dear,
ü Stylish fights,
ü Trademark walk,
ü Victory at the end.
Rajni fans get what they went
for.
Watch it for Rajni. Ignore the
rest.
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