36 Vayadhinile: Worth a cheer, despite a broad TV-soap approach

May 15, 2015 07:49 pm | Updated April 02, 2016 11:55 pm IST

36 Vayadhinile

36 Vayadhinile

In Rosshan Andrrews’s 36 Vayadhinile, based on his Malayalam hit How Old Are You? , Jyotika plays an alien. What else could the character, named Vasanthi, be? She’s 36. Her eyesight is no longer what it was. Her hair is turning silver. She has a teenaged daughter. She works in a government job and lives in a joint family. And to unwind, she watches Tamil soaps. She lip-syncs perfectly, and the film revolves around her. Surely this is not a Tamil-film heroine. I mean, there’s not even a duet. There’s no other explanation. She’s visiting from Venus. And she’s brought with her an otherworldly wardrobe. Say what you will about the rest of the film, there will be those who line up just to see Vasanthi’s impeccable taste in saris.

You could say the same for English Vinglish , where another actress emerged from retirement in a series of dazzling saris. Watching Sridevi there, or Jyotika here, you are reminded that, sometimes, a movie need be about nothing more than watching beautiful people swan around in 70mm.

But there’s more. Like English Vinglish , 36 Vayadhinile is a story of empowerment. It’s about a perennially slighted (some might say subjugated) housewife discovering that her inner closet has a “You Go Girl!” T-shirt after all. In the film’s most touching moment, a friend looks at this subdued version of Vasanthi and asks her what happened to the firebrand she was in college. Vasanthi simply says, “ Theriyale… thedanum .” 36 Vayadhinile is about this search.

The mere existence of this film, in this hero-driven industry of ours, is reason to celebrate. (It’s produced by Suriya, and it feels like he’s atoning for the terrible movies he’s been in of late.) But 36 Vayadhinile is not cinema. It’s, at best, a glorified television soap, broadly written and staged and performed, and blaring its messages through a megaphone.

Director: S.P. Jhananthan Genre: Drama Director: Rosshan Andrrews Cast: Jyotika, Rahman, Abirami Storyline: A housewife learns to be her own woman.

Take Susan (Abirami). She turns up in the second half, as Vasanthi’s saviour. (The background throbs with heavenly music. The usually subtle Santhosh Narayanan chips in with a megaphone of his own.) She’s meeting Vasanthi for the first time after college, some 14 years later. You’d think they’ll do some catching up, have some fun, or at least an ice cream. But no. The very next scene, she begins to lecture Vasanthi. And in the very next scene, Vasanthi changes, as if a switch were activated, as if one bit of well-meaning advice could modify years of ingrained behaviour.

Another problem is the portrayal of Vasanthi’s husband Tamilselvan (Rahman). He’s a positively dreadful man. In English Vinglish , the husband was merely insensitive. The slyly passive-aggressive Tamilselvan expects his wife to take the blame for an accident he’s caused. He vents all his frustrations on her and makes her feel miserable. When the time comes for him to move to Ireland, he doesn’t discuss it with her. He informs her at a restaurant. And once abroad, he expects her to join him because he cannot afford to hire someone to cook and clean. What a prize catch.

There’s not one caring moment between husband and wife, and the film’s biggest failure is making Vasanthi accept his (unstated) apology as if he merely forgot their anniversary. This, again, belongs to another generation, one that stuck with husbands whether they were stones or blades of grass, if you know the saying.

But as I said, it’s not easy to dismiss 36 Vayadhinile . I wish Vasanthi’s emergence as her own woman had been done in a smaller way, instead of making her some sort of crusader. (That megaphone again.) But in K. Balachander’s time, films about working women were routine. Not so today — and just for being such a movie, you have to give it points.

The opening-credits sequence is joyous. We hear the sprightly ‘ Vaadi raasaathi ’ over visuals of women, doctors and lawyers, auto drivers and flower sellers, young and old. Jyotika, too, is one of them, a woman juggling work and home, and even putting her career on hold because of kids, something a man would never have to do. Deservedly, she gets top billing.

A version of this review can be read at >baradwajrangan.wordpress.com

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.