He was grim. The man just bustled into the emergency ward on the stretcher was his dear brother. He had remained eerily motionless throughout. But as soon as the doctor appeared, he broke down, Make him alright doctor. Save him. Please doctor. I love him more than my life. Dont hold back for anything. Money is not a criterion. Please… The utter despair of the man moved even the hardened doctor who assured hed give it his all.
During the entire commotion of the scurrying doctors in and out of the ward, the man had bought the expensive drugs and paid for the admission. The man didnt flinch; he would give anything for his brother. When the doctor came out this time, he hesitated, then removed his glasses slowly and declared that they couldnt save his brother. The man grimaced and, to the doctors shock, the grimace turned into an impish smile. Keeping the smile intact, he produced a piece of paper. It was a certificate, a death certificate.
The man he called his brother had died before he was brought to this disgracefully corrupt hospital.
That just has to be the best scene to have hit the screens this year.
Actually, this just has to be the best movie to have hit the screens this year.
Tagore (easily the best hero in this galaxy, Chiru) is the mastermind behind the undercover, banned Anti-Corruption Force. Its banned for it abducts 15 of the most corrupt officials from each department and kills the top criminal. This is done to
spread terror among the rest of them. If you know you would be killed if you come first in the race, wouldnt you run slowly? And wouldnt the other contenders try to run even slower? Yup, sometimes filmmakers do show that they got brains. Occasionally they go a step further and show they can even use them. But at times they show that they can use them well. Tagore remains gripping throughout, proving that point.
Professionally, Tagore works in a college. It is from here that he builds the network of ACF, sending one of his students into all the government offices as recruits. They maintain records of all the dishonest officeholders, their properties, and the proofs of these. The whiplash of the ACF hence is
absolved by the general populace.
With the growing adulation of the ACF, the police increasingly fail to curb it. Prakash Raj, as a devout man of the force, investigates the case with astute deftness and finally helps to blow the cover off the network. Tagore surrenders, but is provided full amnesty in the end.
Shreya, Sunil and a bunch of cute kids render Tagores personal life to be lovable as well, while Jyothika in a cameo brings out the best in Chiru. Her death is the reason behind Tagores transformation.
Thats for the story. Now, for a fact and reality routine:
Fact: Chirus performance should make all the other heroes give up acting completely.
Reality: They wont.
Fact: Lawrence perhaps has given us everything that he has. Some of the dance steps look repetitive.
Reality: Chiru can keep the audience captivated with his charm and grace forever, even if its just by moving his little finger.
Fact: Mani Sharma has given
better music for Indra than for Tagore.
Reality: Tagore has sold almost the same number of discs.
Fact: The concept is a lift off from a Tamil movie called Ramana.
Reality: So?
Fact: The fight sequences in the movie are not too real and are unbelievable.
Reality: Theyre unbelievable, all right. Not to mention incredible, astounding and mind-boggling.
Fact: This is Mr. Vinayaks 3rd movie itself.
Reality: With so much talent, it certainly wont be his last.
Fact: If the movies so good, why not give it 5 stars?
Reality: There a few obvious landmines: The timing of the songs is awful. Then, the setup of the ruins during Jyothikas death scene is out-and-out ridiculous. The lip-syncing for the special officer from Delhi and the make-up in general are not up to the mark.
Fact: But on any given day, Tagore is definitely a commercial masterpiece.
Reality: True. On any given night as well!
Tagore is an outstanding example of the appeal a well-made commercial movie can have. Dont miss it.