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‘Dora’ review: In the driver’s seat

Published - March 31, 2017 11:14 pm IST

Nayanthara nails it in this revenge drama that works most of the time

A scene from the movie

Early in Dora , there’s a tribute to an unforgettable Rajinikanth dialogue. I was tempted to yawn – we’ve had so many references and tributes to Superstar in recent films – but Nayanthara nails it, both in terms of delivery and style. I was secretly hoping to be at Sathyam Theatre and cheering for her instead of being cocooned at a ‘special’ show.

But that wasn’t the only time I was. There are many instances later in Dora , described as a horror-thriller, when masala fare gently peeps its head, almost sheepishly, in pursuit of claps.

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That , however, isn’t the sole intention of director Doss Ramasamy’s latest offering; his primary aim is to give the thrills and spooks. The storyline kickstarts with Pawalakodi (Nayanthara) and her father Vairakkanu (Thambi Ramaiah) wanting to establish a car rental business but end up buying an antique car that, well, has a past and a mind of its own.

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Meanwhile, a bunch of robbers have broken into a house and the police, headed by Harrish (Harrish Uthaman), are on their lookout.

Dora revolves around these ruffians and how they’re connected with the car – something that unravels well into the second half.

It really helps that the film has limited characters; there are just seven main actors. Leading them is Nayanthara, who, after the intelligent

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Maya , proves yet again how effortless she can be on the big screen. It

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is indeed difficult, especially in this script that places importance not just to the characters but even objects, but as Pawalakodi, she emerges a complete winner. It helps that she has by her side Thambiramayya, who by now seems to be able to sleepwalk such roles with utmost ease. Harrish fits the bill as a cop, while Sulile Kumar, as Mukesh Yadav, is quite competent – he even gets rewarded with some pulsating theme music (by Vivek-Mervin, who’ve also tuned the adorable ‘Enga Pora Dora’ song) and apt lighting (cinematography by Dinesh Krishnan). The downside, however, is that the spooks are few and far between – for someone expecting full-on horror – and the thrills aren’t

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that convincing. But when ‘Lady Superstar’ Nayanthara’s rocking the screen, is it worth complaining?

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