13 reviews
The spots were intelligently placed. At the beginning of the movie, there is a shot of two parts of the city; one very poor & the other is the corporate world. The Taramani station is at the center, separating both these two worlds. It's interesting that when the first meet, they meet at the station because Ram apparently wants to tell us that these two worlds meet. The progression of the story is sort of a class difference. The story took various unexpected turns, but the flow of the movie wasn't steady, but more random.
"Feminism" is seasoned all over the movie. Every man in the movie is dumb, unfaithful, & terrible. That's how men are portrayed in the entire movie, which is basically man hating & therefore, a feministic movie! Since smoking & drinking is a virtuous thing for a society, Ram fights for women by telling us how the society is terribly guilty of not giving this virtuous privilege to women..
Anti-capitalist message is all over the movie again. At the beginning of the movie, there's a shot where the hammer & sickle flag is flying high. When Andrea is fired in the movie, somehow Ram thought it was very important to whine about how great labor unions are & how the capitalist system mistreats workers & that's obviously not true.
"Feminism" is seasoned all over the movie. Every man in the movie is dumb, unfaithful, & terrible. That's how men are portrayed in the entire movie, which is basically man hating & therefore, a feministic movie! Since smoking & drinking is a virtuous thing for a society, Ram fights for women by telling us how the society is terribly guilty of not giving this virtuous privilege to women..
Anti-capitalist message is all over the movie again. At the beginning of the movie, there's a shot where the hammer & sickle flag is flying high. When Andrea is fired in the movie, somehow Ram thought it was very important to whine about how great labor unions are & how the capitalist system mistreats workers & that's obviously not true.
- Fraser_Daniel
- Sep 2, 2017
- Permalink
- arungeorge13
- Sep 11, 2017
- Permalink
I watched Taramani on independence day. I went to the movie thinking about the director Ram only. But the movie was excellent. Every actor deserves credit. The background score, songs are really good.
Even though it is an adults only film, I think u can watch with your family. It moves u very much.
Even though it is an adults only film, I think u can watch with your family. It moves u very much.
- sivakumar-muthuvel
- Aug 16, 2017
- Permalink
One of the best Tamil movie. Fresh story. You can't predict story line. Ram proved himself as genius.
Na Muthukumar's lines are beautiful with Yuvan's music.
Andrea lived as Aathya Joseph. Simply awesome.She may easily be misunderstood as a arrogant but it is her nature. Did well as mother, lover, IT employee.
This film deserves to be watched.
10/10
Na Muthukumar's lines are beautiful with Yuvan's music.
Andrea lived as Aathya Joseph. Simply awesome.She may easily be misunderstood as a arrogant but it is her nature. Did well as mother, lover, IT employee.
This film deserves to be watched.
10/10
- blackkalai
- Aug 21, 2017
- Permalink
The movie depicts casual relation between two strangers in the best possible screenplay.
- dhanrajzepherin
- Jul 13, 2021
- Permalink
Each and every second I was wondered and it reveals the pain of single mom . Really Andrea impressed me so 💞. Respect to the respective Ram and team.
- vignesh-32070
- Dec 31, 2020
- Permalink
It's an excellent movie and direction. Hats off and good work done by all technicians in that movie
Director Ram prefaces Taramani as a knot of unconnected events and so may be meaningless. (மொட்டைத் தலைக்கும் முழங்காலுக்கும் முடிச்சு). The film gets into extremes of almost everything. It portrays the relationship of a street dweller with an upper middle class single mother. It tries to portrays the lights of feminism amidst societal norms. Money gets drawn parallel to honesty. Opportunism is brought in against sincerity. Globalisation versus anti-globalization and self sufficiency. It is a kind of overkill and problem gets widened just because everything is a conflict. Everything gets pardoned and forgiven and you are at peace.
A popular phrase in literary appreciation is "Let the story travel by itself. Let the characters speak!". The problem with Ram's films is; he will be seen throughout the film. It's not just traces, sometimes he gets over the top. In Taramani, he himself acknowledges that and passes on comments and directs the audience (he compares this with Facebook\twitter status messages). If the director of a film in its course comments at the response of audience like "If you haven't questioned globalization, don't question this character!", it is indeed an insult to the audience. If an insult is Ram's primary intention, it is fine. If he aims at questioning the (globalization) ideology of viewers, then he should revisit his theories of a creative art. The experience of Taramani gets established in the preface itself. We will have to experience a satsang or gospel (or a bit of both since the protagonist is an Anglo Indian) except for the fact that you are force fed with life lessons than religious lessons.
A feminist should live on her own. A cliché from Balachander days is also taken over in Taramani. Feminism has been treated differently in the past two decades. We have seen Kalyana Agathigal, Magalir mattum, Marupadiyum, 16 vayathinile etc. There is a subtle difference between feminism and misandry. Unfortunately all the feminist films try to portray hatred for men rather than feminism. If you are a woman and earn 80K/month; man is dependent on you and on a tussle if you can throw him out of the house (saying I am feeding you), what is the kind of feminism you are trying to disclose? You just go on and prove that the control or fight over couples should be mostly on financial front. There is an interesting character in Taramani; a cop's wife. She gets ill treated by her husband. She tries to get over the trauma via books. She reads "Asuran" which is all about injustice to a totem. So, even literally, you are not getting over the hatred.
The urban globalized world is in a transformation. You get confused with a lot of principles. The protagonist's friend goes to a pub, dances with other men when her husband watches her dancing. The friend says, you just have to throw biscuits at these dogs at the right time. There is a higher class lady, who wants to sleep with a stranger, loses her wedding ring. She sleeps with the police commissioner for getting the ring back! It's all Ram Ram!! No character gets committed to a relationship. In the idea of breaking the stereotypes, all the goodness in the conventional wisdom gets totally erased. In that sense, it is a regressive movie to the larger extent.
Taramani is verbally angry at urbanization and birds losing their habitat. Taramani tries to bring out negative shades of urban lives and their insecurities. Taramani disguises itself as a feminist art. Those said and done, dialogues stand out and are emotional. Andrea's best performance till date. Barnabas and his forgiveness add the grace and ray of hope. Though it may seem as a film for matured audience, Taramani just tries to tie a knot between extremes of unconnected entities; which for all its practical difficulties is very rare. Taramani is just a gooey film with a confused core!
A popular phrase in literary appreciation is "Let the story travel by itself. Let the characters speak!". The problem with Ram's films is; he will be seen throughout the film. It's not just traces, sometimes he gets over the top. In Taramani, he himself acknowledges that and passes on comments and directs the audience (he compares this with Facebook\twitter status messages). If the director of a film in its course comments at the response of audience like "If you haven't questioned globalization, don't question this character!", it is indeed an insult to the audience. If an insult is Ram's primary intention, it is fine. If he aims at questioning the (globalization) ideology of viewers, then he should revisit his theories of a creative art. The experience of Taramani gets established in the preface itself. We will have to experience a satsang or gospel (or a bit of both since the protagonist is an Anglo Indian) except for the fact that you are force fed with life lessons than religious lessons.
A feminist should live on her own. A cliché from Balachander days is also taken over in Taramani. Feminism has been treated differently in the past two decades. We have seen Kalyana Agathigal, Magalir mattum, Marupadiyum, 16 vayathinile etc. There is a subtle difference between feminism and misandry. Unfortunately all the feminist films try to portray hatred for men rather than feminism. If you are a woman and earn 80K/month; man is dependent on you and on a tussle if you can throw him out of the house (saying I am feeding you), what is the kind of feminism you are trying to disclose? You just go on and prove that the control or fight over couples should be mostly on financial front. There is an interesting character in Taramani; a cop's wife. She gets ill treated by her husband. She tries to get over the trauma via books. She reads "Asuran" which is all about injustice to a totem. So, even literally, you are not getting over the hatred.
The urban globalized world is in a transformation. You get confused with a lot of principles. The protagonist's friend goes to a pub, dances with other men when her husband watches her dancing. The friend says, you just have to throw biscuits at these dogs at the right time. There is a higher class lady, who wants to sleep with a stranger, loses her wedding ring. She sleeps with the police commissioner for getting the ring back! It's all Ram Ram!! No character gets committed to a relationship. In the idea of breaking the stereotypes, all the goodness in the conventional wisdom gets totally erased. In that sense, it is a regressive movie to the larger extent.
Taramani is verbally angry at urbanization and birds losing their habitat. Taramani tries to bring out negative shades of urban lives and their insecurities. Taramani disguises itself as a feminist art. Those said and done, dialogues stand out and are emotional. Andrea's best performance till date. Barnabas and his forgiveness add the grace and ray of hope. Though it may seem as a film for matured audience, Taramani just tries to tie a knot between extremes of unconnected entities; which for all its practical difficulties is very rare. Taramani is just a gooey film with a confused core!
- gganesh-93114
- Aug 19, 2017
- Permalink
I am a fan of "Ram" and his creations and had loved Katradhu Tamizh despite it's disturbing content. But I rate "Taramani" the best that he has created by far. Would have loved it if he had kept off the voice overs. Showcased the performer in Andrea Jeremiah. And as usual Azhagan perumal shines in his role. Kudos to Vasanth Ravi; for a debut he has shouldered a very challenging role and has done quiet well, but has a long way to burnish the actor in him.
Very moved by how well the movie touched upon a wide array of social & environmental issues.
Looking forward to Ram's next gift..
Very moved by how well the movie touched upon a wide array of social & environmental issues.
Looking forward to Ram's next gift..
- jaisimhakb
- Nov 2, 2017
- Permalink
An excellent movie, especially the feelings of women when a man try to abuse her was described without words. Worth to watch and a well happy ending. I missed the movie at the release time. But, there is a reason that it is reached me on the right time that I required. Thank you Ram, you made my 2 hours 26 mins more worth. The messages inbetween of the movie also an unexpected. And Ram sir your voiceover also awesome. The words are worth it. And the parallel path of the nature with the story situation awuesoecially the dove's death and returns. Best charecter selection, thank you for the movie sir.
- tamildprintingerd
- Oct 3, 2022
- Permalink
This is the kind of film that gives the outlook of women empowering movie against social stigma like the trailers promised and maybe the makers even believed that, but the film is plagued with the patriarchal outlook of the men who made it that for the most part, it satisfies the usual stigma and works pretty much against any women empowering. Even though the problems exit a lot of valid points are raised and considering the general mellowing for the society at least those points will come across to those people rather than completely avoiding the film that goes against their beliefs. The plot is weird, the narration is weirder and the metaphorical indulgence was just trying too much and failing. Andrea was good as the lead and the best part of the film are probably the weird narration when it had nothing to do with the central plot of the film.
- Jithindurden
- Jan 11, 2018
- Permalink
A very poor film in all respects. The story meanders, attempting to incorporate philosophy and new methods of story teling that all fall flat. Bad direction adds to the baggage of the film. Religious overtures in the film are incompetent influences on the film, complicating an already poor plot.
Waste of time,effort and resources.
Waste of time,effort and resources.
- sanjay-kannan
- Sep 15, 2017
- Permalink
One of the worst movies in Tamil industry. Sorry correction.The only worst movie. A crap movie with a pointless story line. so many clichés. if I had a chance to meet the director I would have personally told him about how disappointed I was. seriously disappointed after watching this movie. Andrea could have picked a better movie than this. I personally think that the movie could end within half an hour rather than stretching it to 2 and half hours.I think the actor is a new face in Tamil industry.I feel pity for his first movie. It ruined my sleep!
- hetlar-87434
- Sep 1, 2017
- Permalink