Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueKarthik, a civil engineer falls deeply in love with Sandhya, a child pediatrician. Eashwar has vowed to kill Naushad's son in order to take revenge for killing his wife and son in a road acc... Tout lireKarthik, a civil engineer falls deeply in love with Sandhya, a child pediatrician. Eashwar has vowed to kill Naushad's son in order to take revenge for killing his wife and son in a road accident.Karthik, a civil engineer falls deeply in love with Sandhya, a child pediatrician. Eashwar has vowed to kill Naushad's son in order to take revenge for killing his wife and son in a road accident.
- Prix
- 4 victoires et 3 nominations au total
Avis en vedette
The movie basically the theme is good but vishnu vardhan failed to catch the audience response in the second half of the movie.The first half is mind blowing performance by Arya and Trisha.All the songs are very good with excellent choreography and locations behind the scenes are nice.The only mistake in the movie is the Villain.He is utter waste in the movie.His acting is poor.
Once watchable only the first half and second half is very bore.Yuvan done his best in his music performance.There is one song in that movie in which Arya hits many vehicles such that nothing happens to him.That camera work was excellent.
Once watchable only the first half and second half is very bore.Yuvan done his best in his music performance.There is one song in that movie in which Arya hits many vehicles such that nothing happens to him.That camera work was excellent.
The underlying gist of the movie was how one tries to convey his pain to others. It succeeded in conveying that pain to the audience!
It was really painful to watch the movie. The romance had nothing interesting and was waiting for something to happen there. Chakravarthi / Arya / the father who accidentally killed a family.. none of these could act. The kid around whom half the movie was overacted trying to compensate for the lack of acting of others! The makeup for Trisha was awful and I am sure she would have regretted having acted in this movie.
Totally painful to watch!
It was really painful to watch the movie. The romance had nothing interesting and was waiting for something to happen there. Chakravarthi / Arya / the father who accidentally killed a family.. none of these could act. The kid around whom half the movie was overacted trying to compensate for the lack of acting of others! The makeup for Trisha was awful and I am sure she would have regretted having acted in this movie.
Totally painful to watch!
When a technically sound film like Sarvam evokes mixed reactions from all quarters (didn't register with me), one is invariably drawn to the conclusion that the source material is probably flawed. This came up during a discussion when my uncle expressed surprise at the director's choice of subject to make a film. This is something that has fascinated me to no end. How do film-makers pick one idea out of the many that cross their minds as the one most appealing to them, most likely to appeal to an audience and also the most demanding of their faculties ? Vishnuvardhan's (director) choice of the story, particularly the narrative, is the intriguing thing about the movie. Sarvam comes under the category of anthology films (Aayidha Ezhuthu) where different sub-narratives are connected by an event, person, place etc. Despite the success of Amorres Perros and the popularity of Aayidha Ezhuthu with youngsters, I doubt if making an anthology-based narrative hinge on an event will gain widespread acceptance. Four Rooms, to me, is as quirky and self-obsessed a movie as can possibly be. Inspite of this, the connecting thread between the four disjointed tales being a person (Tim Roth) lends perspective to the film. Aayidha Ezhuthu involved a place (Napier's Bridge) along with an event as a connector of sorts but it evaded this issue by having three story lines featuring male protagonists who represent three answers to the same question. The point being made is that switching perspectives is the last thing an Indian audience wants to do once it has got a grip of what the story is about and what might unfold. This is somewhat analogous to the preference for full-fledged novels over short-story collections.
Also, movies that change track dramatically just about halfway end up being two different movies eventually. Such films are usually successful when the switch connects with viewers. Sarvam will probably go down in the books as one that didn't. With the result when the switch came, the second half had virtually no participation from me as is possibly the case with many. In other words, for this film to work, it needed to put up a strong case for J D Chakravarthy's character and generate more than just the odd sympathetic nod. In my view, it didn't. Despite the overall feeling of distaste, certain aspects struck me as being worthy of praise. Firstly the cinematography. Few during the eighties and the nineties would have anticipated a surge in this aspect of film-making. Cinematographic excellence is now so frequent in Tamizh cinema (the legacy of Balu Mahendra and Mani Ratnam) that it leads one to believe that soon, it will be taken for granted. Even so, the work here towers above the rest. Be it the songs or the sequences in Munnar, Nirav Shah and Vishnuvardhan work wonders with the camera.
Trisha along with Ilaiyaraja's Mella Mella make the first half worth it.
Also, movies that change track dramatically just about halfway end up being two different movies eventually. Such films are usually successful when the switch connects with viewers. Sarvam will probably go down in the books as one that didn't. With the result when the switch came, the second half had virtually no participation from me as is possibly the case with many. In other words, for this film to work, it needed to put up a strong case for J D Chakravarthy's character and generate more than just the odd sympathetic nod. In my view, it didn't. Despite the overall feeling of distaste, certain aspects struck me as being worthy of praise. Firstly the cinematography. Few during the eighties and the nineties would have anticipated a surge in this aspect of film-making. Cinematographic excellence is now so frequent in Tamizh cinema (the legacy of Balu Mahendra and Mani Ratnam) that it leads one to believe that soon, it will be taken for granted. Even so, the work here towers above the rest. Be it the songs or the sequences in Munnar, Nirav Shah and Vishnuvardhan work wonders with the camera.
Trisha along with Ilaiyaraja's Mella Mella make the first half worth it.
This movie made me feel and the feeling was so good with yuvan's musical.
Actually I loved it.
There are three plots in Sarvam.
1. Chakravarthi avenging the death of his son
2. Romantic track of the lead pair
3. Hero's bonding with The child as he vows to protect him.
There was nothing novel about the romantic track - a typical boy meets girl kind of expected storyline. Trisha didn't seem fully convinced about the movie and it showed.
The hero was just passable (read that needs time to polish his skills).
Chakravarthy seems to be possessed by the ghost of Kamal Hassan. Very very lame.
Sarvam starts off with a quote from from the Upanishads - don't be fooled into thinking the movie would deliver a high quotient drama. The storyline is stale pretty much rotting since 1970's. There are too many cinematic liberties. The packaging is glossy which deserves special mention. Cinematographer should be applauded for the rich visuals (be it Munnar, the rains or the song sequences). A few songs are good while the rest are jarring. And yes, the action sequences well executed. Finally the movie could have easily trimmed by 45-minutes - yes you read that right, for there were lots of places where it seemed a drag. Especially so when its such a predictable fare! Lastly - the CGI's were used well.
For multiplex audience, its a full time-pass outing.
PS:: Ilayaraja vs. Rahman - tch! tch! can it sink any deeper?
1. Chakravarthi avenging the death of his son
2. Romantic track of the lead pair
3. Hero's bonding with The child as he vows to protect him.
There was nothing novel about the romantic track - a typical boy meets girl kind of expected storyline. Trisha didn't seem fully convinced about the movie and it showed.
The hero was just passable (read that needs time to polish his skills).
Chakravarthy seems to be possessed by the ghost of Kamal Hassan. Very very lame.
Sarvam starts off with a quote from from the Upanishads - don't be fooled into thinking the movie would deliver a high quotient drama. The storyline is stale pretty much rotting since 1970's. There are too many cinematic liberties. The packaging is glossy which deserves special mention. Cinematographer should be applauded for the rich visuals (be it Munnar, the rains or the song sequences). A few songs are good while the rest are jarring. And yes, the action sequences well executed. Finally the movie could have easily trimmed by 45-minutes - yes you read that right, for there were lots of places where it seemed a drag. Especially so when its such a predictable fare! Lastly - the CGI's were used well.
For multiplex audience, its a full time-pass outing.
PS:: Ilayaraja vs. Rahman - tch! tch! can it sink any deeper?
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Détails
Box-office
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 134 756 $ US
- Durée
- 2h 23m(143 min)
- Couleur
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