Tamil Cinema has been going through a wonderful period recently where anyone who has a good story – even decent story - to narrate is getting the avenue to make his or her movie. The audience is surprisingly receptive to these movies from rank newcomers in an industry that is dominated by stars, big production houses and larger than life premises. Cinema was always supposed to be the common man’s escape from his daily grind, which is true to a large extent but should cinema be slotted within or constrained by such platitudes ?"
In a year where even a Mani Ratnam’s movie had to bite dust at the theatres came Mysskin’s “Onayum Aatukuttiyum”. Mysskin is an intelligent filmmaker, too intelligent some would say. In this movie he brings the story of a medical college student whose life gets intermeshed in a vicious web of crime and deceit. On his way back home after a night of studies at his friend’s house, Chandru finds a man lying on the road with bullet-shot wounds. Earlier a lot of people pass by the hapless man, the usual apathy we exhibit at this situation is portrayed starkly. People who stop to see if the man has life and leave when they see he has. People who shoot pictures for social media. People who don’t want to do anything about a wounded man on the road.
The system is the next on Mysskin’s list. Chandru isn’t able to get medical attention to the wounded man in a hospital, neither is he able to get the law enforcement’s attention. One of the police men even steal the wounded man’s watch right behind Chandru’s back. Sheer desperation forces Chandru to take the man home and treat his wound with help from his Professor, who himself is bereaved that night, an event that seems to play a role in the Professor deciding to help Chandru perform the medical procedures after initially rebuking him sharply for acting irresponsibly.
The Crime Branch lands on Chandru’s house the next day because the wounded man was Wolf, who was fleeing after being shot by the police in an “encounter”. Wolf, according to the Police, is a most wanted criminal with over 14 murders to his name which includes a blind teenager. A lot of these facts help us join the dots together in the third act of the movie. Chandru and his elder Brother are taken into Police custody, unofficially, while Chandru’s sister in law is kept under house arrest.
The Police characters have been sketched well. We are used to templates of either too good or too bad cops in uniform in Cinema. Here you have a mix of policemen. The corrupt officer who is hand in glove with another dreaded criminals. Tons of policemen on night beats, manning check points, who are scared as we’d be at such times. High ranking officer who want to help Chandru but hesitates due to passive pressure from his juniors and yet when circumstances change has no qualms in calling a hit to rid the society of an alleged dreaded criminal.
The best writing comes in the form of a CB-CID duo who read between the lines all through the movie to pursue their own course of finding Wolf. One of these two has a brilliant dialogue explaining to his superior officer why he won’t let Chandru escape Police custody, despite the custody being unlawful. When the Wolf wants to meet Chandru the Police hatch a plan to eliminate him. Is the Wolf stupid enough to walk into a trap laid out by the Police ? Why does the Wolf want to meet Chandru ? The rest of the movie is about how Chandru is used by the police as a lamb to lure the wolf and how Wolf navigates the quagmire.
This movie has been shot entirely in the night, not the usual DI work of turning a day shot into night. Ilaiyaraja’s foreground score, as the titles put it, support the movie ably. Mysskin’s martial arts background set the stage for some brilliant action choreography, complete with two samurai’s nailed to each other in the end. Mysskin even stretches the Onaay trait by showing Wolf with a tail. God is an underlying character all through the movie showing up on the wall Chandru runs past, as screams from Policemen who get shot, in the cemetery etc. “Onaayum Aatukuttiyum” is a brilliant attempt from a filmmaker who is completely in control of his form and technique, a Tamil movie that can rival any other good thriller from anywhere else in the world.