IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,4/10
1898
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuThe story revolves around the life of a planter, Adam Joan Pothan from the village Mundakkayam. One day, he unexpectedly meets a girl named Emy and they go to Scotland together. The new peop... Alles lesenThe story revolves around the life of a planter, Adam Joan Pothan from the village Mundakkayam. One day, he unexpectedly meets a girl named Emy and they go to Scotland together. The new people he meets on his journey changes his life.The story revolves around the life of a planter, Adam Joan Pothan from the village Mundakkayam. One day, he unexpectedly meets a girl named Emy and they go to Scotland together. The new people he meets on his journey changes his life.
- Auszeichnungen
- 1 Gewinn & 2 Nominierungen insgesamt
Mishti Chakravarty
- Amy Adam Joan
- (as Mishti)
Pamela Hanson Ryder
- Police Constable
- (as Pamela Hanson)
Angel Shijoy
- Mishti
- (Synchronisation)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
Plot: Plot was good but I had to remember the plot forever -it got better in the end-because it was slow and most of the movie used up too much time with slow motion shots of Prithviraj. If you use a technique over excessively which does not help the story, it starts getting boring. Story lacked comedy, and most of the characters almost sounded the same. This can happen if the writer while writing did not make much effort to separate the characters. Direction: Average, too many drone shots and characters were buried in too many slow motion shots. Colour temperature was correctly used to reflect a crime suspense but it was overused to the extent that warm colours were mostly indoor shots. That was a clear distraction. Most of the background music came right out of stock music available online. It is OK for short movies but bad for fairly budgeted movie. Conclusion: Plot was good but dialogue and direction were poorly executed. Disclaimer: This is just my opinion!
Prithviraj's eye for serious, moody thrillers is clearly evident in his recent filmography ("Adam Joan", "Tiyaan", "Ezra", "Oozham"). Heck, the man hasn't made us laugh since "Paavada" or "Amar Akbar Anthony". He seems to enjoy putting on the grieving face though. "Adam Joan" is in fact, peaking Prithvi-in-anguish.
Writer/director Jinu Abraham has decided to narrate the better part of his tale amidst the gorgeous locales of Scotland, with a cinematographer capable of providing the kind of support he needs. The first half establishes the lead characters of Adam Joan (Prithvi), his wife Emy (Mishti), his brother Alan (Rahul Madhav) and wife Shweta (Bhavana), and friend Cyriac (Narain). Adam's wife dies at childbirth (and it wasn't exactly his opinion to have a child so early into his marriage) and while returning to Kerala, he leaves the newborn in the hands of his brother and wife who haven't had a child in 5 years. Six years later, another tragic incident (that involves the cold-blooded murder of his mom and kidnap of his little daughter, by Satan worshippers) brings Adam back to Scotland (with a vengeance), where he unearths some dark secrets.
A major portion of the first half moves along foreseeable lines (of a typical Christian Malayali romance) but where Jinu is able to initially intrigue is during the "investigation" bits. The making is by all means, exceptional for Malayalam movie standards. Almost everything boasts of grandeur in the film. The director seems to have complete knowledge of the luscious beauty the country of Scotland holds, but occasionally, one tends to feel that his choice of wide-angled, panoramic shots were slightly overdone. Almost every third shot involved a solo moving vehicle on a deserted road captured using a drone. Every frame is supposed to look like a travel-themed wallpaper which lends a wee bit of plasticity to the film. The interval block leaves us mildly fascinated in the hope of a horde of neatly packaged twists to follow.
Although we get a few sly references to voodoo-practicing families in Kerala (all the while focusing on the bigger picture in Scotland) post-interval, these aren't fully explored into. While Jinu has definitely done his bit of research in studying the gloomy aesthetics of Satan-worship (the sets, the foreign actors, the dialogues - none of them disappoint!), he could have made the proceedings look a lot racier. The investigative style of Adam and Cyriac even follows a template (repetitive scenes at the dungeon- like chamber with different individuals). We just needed to see more of a psychological struggle for Adam than just his bodily scars to feel invested in his quest. The twists expected in a thriller are heavily lacking and the supposed big-reveal is made pretty early on.
Mark Strange is a good choice for the main antagonist (a high-priest in the cult of Satan) - the body language, dialogue delivery and even the stunts - on point. If only had the writer/director put more emphasis on tightening the script and chopped out a few portions, then 'Adam Joan' would have broken sensational ground as a revenge- thriller. Performance-wise, Prithvi is in his zone as we already know by now. Narain does well playing Adam's right-hand man (his on-screen bromistry with Prithvi is well-known in Malayalam cinema) while the rest pitch in whatever is required of them in the script.
Songs compositions by Deepak Dev and background score by Gopi Sunder are in tune with the mood of the film, although a tad too loud at times (and likely to turn off the older crowd). Cinematography by Jithu Damodar deserves a special mention as there are plenty of scenes shot in filters and low-light but still manages to dazzle overall. The stunt sequence at the end is slightly prolonged and doesn't evoke the kind of teeth-clenching reaction it was supposed to. The hackneyed application of slow-motion does nothing but add to the run-time.
Verdict: For lovers of slow, dark thrillers only!
Writer/director Jinu Abraham has decided to narrate the better part of his tale amidst the gorgeous locales of Scotland, with a cinematographer capable of providing the kind of support he needs. The first half establishes the lead characters of Adam Joan (Prithvi), his wife Emy (Mishti), his brother Alan (Rahul Madhav) and wife Shweta (Bhavana), and friend Cyriac (Narain). Adam's wife dies at childbirth (and it wasn't exactly his opinion to have a child so early into his marriage) and while returning to Kerala, he leaves the newborn in the hands of his brother and wife who haven't had a child in 5 years. Six years later, another tragic incident (that involves the cold-blooded murder of his mom and kidnap of his little daughter, by Satan worshippers) brings Adam back to Scotland (with a vengeance), where he unearths some dark secrets.
A major portion of the first half moves along foreseeable lines (of a typical Christian Malayali romance) but where Jinu is able to initially intrigue is during the "investigation" bits. The making is by all means, exceptional for Malayalam movie standards. Almost everything boasts of grandeur in the film. The director seems to have complete knowledge of the luscious beauty the country of Scotland holds, but occasionally, one tends to feel that his choice of wide-angled, panoramic shots were slightly overdone. Almost every third shot involved a solo moving vehicle on a deserted road captured using a drone. Every frame is supposed to look like a travel-themed wallpaper which lends a wee bit of plasticity to the film. The interval block leaves us mildly fascinated in the hope of a horde of neatly packaged twists to follow.
Although we get a few sly references to voodoo-practicing families in Kerala (all the while focusing on the bigger picture in Scotland) post-interval, these aren't fully explored into. While Jinu has definitely done his bit of research in studying the gloomy aesthetics of Satan-worship (the sets, the foreign actors, the dialogues - none of them disappoint!), he could have made the proceedings look a lot racier. The investigative style of Adam and Cyriac even follows a template (repetitive scenes at the dungeon- like chamber with different individuals). We just needed to see more of a psychological struggle for Adam than just his bodily scars to feel invested in his quest. The twists expected in a thriller are heavily lacking and the supposed big-reveal is made pretty early on.
Mark Strange is a good choice for the main antagonist (a high-priest in the cult of Satan) - the body language, dialogue delivery and even the stunts - on point. If only had the writer/director put more emphasis on tightening the script and chopped out a few portions, then 'Adam Joan' would have broken sensational ground as a revenge- thriller. Performance-wise, Prithvi is in his zone as we already know by now. Narain does well playing Adam's right-hand man (his on-screen bromistry with Prithvi is well-known in Malayalam cinema) while the rest pitch in whatever is required of them in the script.
Songs compositions by Deepak Dev and background score by Gopi Sunder are in tune with the mood of the film, although a tad too loud at times (and likely to turn off the older crowd). Cinematography by Jithu Damodar deserves a special mention as there are plenty of scenes shot in filters and low-light but still manages to dazzle overall. The stunt sequence at the end is slightly prolonged and doesn't evoke the kind of teeth-clenching reaction it was supposed to. The hackneyed application of slow-motion does nothing but add to the run-time.
Verdict: For lovers of slow, dark thrillers only!
~mild spoilers~
I was skeptical eventhough trailer looked promosing and after watching the film I've only one line to say "technically outstanding but glibly written screenplay marred its potential." Film had all the quality to being branded as an international film however leisurely done pacing and lacking solid substance(yet innovative) shackled its repeated viewing. Coming to the story film dealt with sensitive topics and paganism. Story has many loose end which fail to connect the dots by the end, some characters were not etched out properly. Climax is pretty predictable. Cinematography in this film is on a different level which is exactly why it looks like a non-indian film along with the colour shading they opt for visually stunning scotland which is apt for dark thrillers.
Acting: Prithviraj is in his comfort zone because this genre is his forte. He perfectly played his character. Bhavana after a long time got something to perform and she did it brilliantly. Other actors like Narain ,Lena, Kpac Lalitha, Misthi & Rahul madhav done their part well. I've to appreciate the casting director for finding capable foreign actors, all the foreigners played their role with absolute brilliance. Thumps up! Songs were decent and Bgm at places remind me of deathnote series. Film should have been trimmed atleast by 20 minutes. Had good concept and great potential if used wisely. Rating: 6.3/10
Acting: Prithviraj is in his comfort zone because this genre is his forte. He perfectly played his character. Bhavana after a long time got something to perform and she did it brilliantly. Other actors like Narain ,Lena, Kpac Lalitha, Misthi & Rahul madhav done their part well. I've to appreciate the casting director for finding capable foreign actors, all the foreigners played their role with absolute brilliance. Thumps up! Songs were decent and Bgm at places remind me of deathnote series. Film should have been trimmed atleast by 20 minutes. Had good concept and great potential if used wisely. Rating: 6.3/10
Subject matter lacking authenticity and don't entertain the audience much. Must have wasted so much money for this script. It could have been better
10nh-31088
When I have first watched the teaser, I was very excited about the film.
There are some scenes which could have been avoided to save time, but every movie has some of those..but it's Very beautiful movie, I really enjoyed it with my family.It has fantastic background score and emotions helps in maintaining the pace of the movie.
Do watch it!
Do watch it!
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThis film features Satan worship, probably the first in Indian Cinema.
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Offizieller Standort
- Sprachen
- Auch bekannt als
- Адам Джоан
- Drehorte
- Thumpamon, Kerala, Indien(Kerala)
- Produktionsfirma
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 373.271 $
- Laufzeit
- 2 Std. 40 Min.(160 min)
- Farbe
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