Veera Dheera Sooran: Part 2
- 2025
- 2 h 42 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,9/10
5,9 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaKaali, a provision store owner and a loving husband and father, whose involvement in a dangerous crime network and his mysterious mission forms the rest of the story.Kaali, a provision store owner and a loving husband and father, whose involvement in a dangerous crime network and his mysterious mission forms the rest of the story.Kaali, a provision store owner and a loving husband and father, whose involvement in a dangerous crime network and his mysterious mission forms the rest of the story.
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Veera Dheera Sooran is a unique take on the thriller genre, with all the right ingredients to keep you on the edge of your seat. Though branded as an action thriller, it surprises by blending family drama with intense suspense. It's rare for a film to keep you hooked without relying on action in the first half, yet this one does just that, cleverly using restraint to build tension and make the eventual action feel earned.
The film takes its time to establish the characters, the atmosphere, and the world they inhabit, and it does so wonderfully. Even without grand action sequences initially, Veera Dheera Sooran remains engrossing, with the first half maintaining a forward momentum that keeps you invested.
Vikram is on fire, delivering one standout performance after another in recent years-Mahaan, PS1 and PS2, Thangalaan. In Veera Dheera Sooran, he adds incredible depth to a genre often dominated by spectacle. His performance grounds the film, and his chemistry with the effervescent Dushara brings an emotional authenticity to their relationship. Together, with the Mom character and the two kids, they create a powerful family dynamic that keeps you deeply invested in their journey, balancing both the tension and drama effortlessly.
SJ Suryah adds yet another dimension to his acting repertoire. From Iravi and Jackie Pandian to his cunning portrayal of Arunagiri in VDS, his range is remarkable. Suraj Venjaramoodu delivers a fantastic Tamil debut, conveying so much through his eyes, while Prudhviraj's character arc adds a sinister, multi-layered complexity. Another standout performance is from Venkat, who holds his own brilliantly against Vikram in key scenes. Two moments in particular highlight his strength-first, the intense landmine (Kizhangu) sequence, and second, the gripping climax where Vikram confronts, chases, and ultimately kills him.
The film's pacing and buildup are intricately woven through the relationships between these characters, especially the constant push and pull between loyalty, trust, and betrayal. From the lead to the supporting cast, every character has a well-developed arc that adds layers to the story.
What stands out in Veera Dheera Sooran is how it subverts genre expectations. While it fits within the action-thriller mold, it doesn't rely on the usual mass tropes we often associate with such films. Instead, it's far more grounded and layered, blending family dynamics with crime and suspense in a thoughtful, nuanced way. The attention to detail is what makes it so rewarding, and the screenplay doesn't hold your hand-mysteries and small details unfold naturally, keeping you engaged in a way that few thrillers manage to do.
SU Arun Kumar has truly redeemed himself since Chittha. With VDS, he has elevated his craft to the next level. He's one of the new-age directors who knows how to scale up from smaller films to larger ones while keeping the storytelling grounded and realistic.
That said, the film's final payoff, while impactful, doesn't entirely deliver the emotional release that it seems to be building toward. It's like having a delicious full-course meal where the dessert, though tasty, doesn't quite live up to the expectations set by the main course. The buildup was compelling enough that the ending felt a little bit like it could have used a bit more punch. But that's a minor quibble in an otherwise well-executed movie.
In conclusion, VDS is a film that deserves to be experienced in theatres. It's an ambitious and refreshing take on the thriller genre, one that skillfully mixes family drama with crime thriller elements, keeping you engaged throughout. Despite a slightly underwhelming payoff, the film has more than enough to offer in terms of performances, tension, and world-building. If you're looking for a movie that keeps you hooked from start to finish, this is a must-watch in theatres.
The film takes its time to establish the characters, the atmosphere, and the world they inhabit, and it does so wonderfully. Even without grand action sequences initially, Veera Dheera Sooran remains engrossing, with the first half maintaining a forward momentum that keeps you invested.
Vikram is on fire, delivering one standout performance after another in recent years-Mahaan, PS1 and PS2, Thangalaan. In Veera Dheera Sooran, he adds incredible depth to a genre often dominated by spectacle. His performance grounds the film, and his chemistry with the effervescent Dushara brings an emotional authenticity to their relationship. Together, with the Mom character and the two kids, they create a powerful family dynamic that keeps you deeply invested in their journey, balancing both the tension and drama effortlessly.
SJ Suryah adds yet another dimension to his acting repertoire. From Iravi and Jackie Pandian to his cunning portrayal of Arunagiri in VDS, his range is remarkable. Suraj Venjaramoodu delivers a fantastic Tamil debut, conveying so much through his eyes, while Prudhviraj's character arc adds a sinister, multi-layered complexity. Another standout performance is from Venkat, who holds his own brilliantly against Vikram in key scenes. Two moments in particular highlight his strength-first, the intense landmine (Kizhangu) sequence, and second, the gripping climax where Vikram confronts, chases, and ultimately kills him.
The film's pacing and buildup are intricately woven through the relationships between these characters, especially the constant push and pull between loyalty, trust, and betrayal. From the lead to the supporting cast, every character has a well-developed arc that adds layers to the story.
What stands out in Veera Dheera Sooran is how it subverts genre expectations. While it fits within the action-thriller mold, it doesn't rely on the usual mass tropes we often associate with such films. Instead, it's far more grounded and layered, blending family dynamics with crime and suspense in a thoughtful, nuanced way. The attention to detail is what makes it so rewarding, and the screenplay doesn't hold your hand-mysteries and small details unfold naturally, keeping you engaged in a way that few thrillers manage to do.
SU Arun Kumar has truly redeemed himself since Chittha. With VDS, he has elevated his craft to the next level. He's one of the new-age directors who knows how to scale up from smaller films to larger ones while keeping the storytelling grounded and realistic.
That said, the film's final payoff, while impactful, doesn't entirely deliver the emotional release that it seems to be building toward. It's like having a delicious full-course meal where the dessert, though tasty, doesn't quite live up to the expectations set by the main course. The buildup was compelling enough that the ending felt a little bit like it could have used a bit more punch. But that's a minor quibble in an otherwise well-executed movie.
In conclusion, VDS is a film that deserves to be experienced in theatres. It's an ambitious and refreshing take on the thriller genre, one that skillfully mixes family drama with crime thriller elements, keeping you engaged throughout. Despite a slightly underwhelming payoff, the film has more than enough to offer in terms of performances, tension, and world-building. If you're looking for a movie that keeps you hooked from start to finish, this is a must-watch in theatres.
I am my biggest enemy, that's how this movie ends. After building a good storyline, they end up ruinning it in the end with stupid action scenes that have no need in this movie other than to get a few whistles and claps in the theater. The ending is an absolutely cringe and lets the movie down horribly. The lighting throughout the movie was jarring and over bright, made it look like a TV serial. Sooraj (the Malayalam actor) did a very poor job, someone like Fahad fasil was needed for this role, but he would have over powered Vikram, maybe that's why they did not approach him. This is supposed to be a part 2 movie and at the end of it you are supposed to be high on anticipation to know what is in the prequel but, this ending makes you feel like, who cares?? This movie could have been so much better but it was a big let down at the end. Horrible camera work, horrible lighting, horrible action. Big let down at the end.
The reviews were spot on-Veera Dheera Sooran hooks you right from the opening scene with its gripping narrative. The film keeps you engaged with solid storytelling, immersive cinematography, and a standout single-shot sequence that adds to the intensity.
GV Prakash delivers a decent performance, complementing the film's tone well. However, where the movie falters is in its extended screenplay towards the climax. The last half, while still engaging, loses momentum, making the final stretch feel unnecessarily prolonged. If about 20 minutes had been trimmed, this could have easily been a 4-star film.
Despite its minor flaws, Veera Dheera Sooran is a well-crafted movie with strong storytelling and technical finesse. Just the drag in the climax holds it back from being truly exceptional.
GV Prakash delivers a decent performance, complementing the film's tone well. However, where the movie falters is in its extended screenplay towards the climax. The last half, while still engaging, loses momentum, making the final stretch feel unnecessarily prolonged. If about 20 minutes had been trimmed, this could have easily been a 4-star film.
Despite its minor flaws, Veera Dheera Sooran is a well-crafted movie with strong storytelling and technical finesse. Just the drag in the climax holds it back from being truly exceptional.
Synopsis
With tense scenes that offer thrills and mas moments, SU Arun Kumar's Veera Dheera Sooran - Part 2 soars in its first half but comes crashing to the ground with a routine third act
Veera Dheera Sooran - Part 2 Movie Review: A solid action thriller undone by a conventional, weakly written third act.
Veera Dheera Sooran - Part 2 Movie Synopsis: A gangster who has given up his violent ways agrees to take up one last hit job to save his former boss' son, who is the target of a police officer seeking to settle an old score. With all three using his family as a threat to bend him to their will, can he outsmart them all and remain the last man standing?
Veera Dheera Sooran - Part 2 Movie Review: SU Arun Kumar's Veera Dheera Sooran begins in a most intriguing manner. The filmmaker drops us in the middle of a developing situation with hardly any setup to give us an idea of why things are happening. This instantly makes us get involved with the film - even though we hardly know anything about its plot or character. A woman lands up at the door of Periyavar/Ravi (Prudhvi Raj, cast against type in a serious role), a local big shot with criminal links, of doing away with her husband. Her husband, meanwhile, complains to SP Arunagiri (SJ Suryah, fine balancing the greyness of the character to keep us guessing) that his wife and daughter are missing. This provides the cop with the ammo that he's been looking for to take down Periyavar and his son Kannan (Suraj Venjaramoodu, making an impressive debut in Tamil), who had played dirty with him a decade ago. Arunagiri plots an encounter killing prompting Periyavar to reach out to his erstwhile viswasi Kaali (a robust Vikram who offers a peek into the mass avatar of his Dhool and Saamy days), who has given up his violent ways and is now leading a peaceful life with his wife Kalai (a competent Dushara Vijayan even makes us overlook the huge age gap between her and the male lead) and their two children. Arun Kumar keeps the tension alive by making Kaali vulnerable as he pits him against three individuals who he cannot trust and yet do their bidding as they slyly use his family as a threat in their own ways. At least until the intermission, the director holds back from giving us any peek into their shared history. All we get are mere mentions of events and names from their past - especially an incident that they refer to as 'Sudhakar sambavam' - which has led them all to this powder keg of a situation. This actually forces us, the audience, to individually imagine what might have happened, and pick characters to root for as well as hate.
And tense action keeps unfolding as there are cat-and-mouse-game-like scenarios and near-miss episodes that keep us hooked. One particular scene, involving landmines (or "kezhangu", as the characters call it) delivers edge-of-the-seat thrill, and another, which marks the meeting of Kaali and Arunagiri gives us a whistle-worthy mass masala moment. The film would have remained unique and engaging (and also justifying the Part 2 in the title) if Arun Kumar had trusted his audience and chosen to show us only the events that unfold during this one night. Perhaps he felt breaking the convention of providing a flashback would be too risky a move, but the director decides to give us the back story (at least the portions that matter), including the 'Sudhakar sambavam'. This is where the film begins to lose its individuality as the back story that we eventually get doesn't match with what we have all built up in our heads all through the first half; rather, it just feels so routine!
The film does recover from this minor setback when it gets back to the present with an ambitious one-shot set piece (shot with dynamism by Theni Eswar, whose night-time cinematography is one of the film's strong points) that begins with a group of characters discussing who among them could be the black sheep and moves on to a shootout between cops and gangsters, and then to a heroic moment. But then, just when we expect it to soar higher, it helplessly remains stuck on the ground. Like someone painstakingly building a house of cards and finally making a move that brings most of the structure down, Arun Kumar undoes all the earlier good work with a weakly written third act (despite its title, this is not the film where we can willingly suspend disbelief when its hero gets back up after being thrashed and even shot at by over a dozen men) that leaves us with a slightly bitter aftertaste. And the director himself seems to have realised this and decides to bank on nostalgia (yes, with THAT Vikram song!) to inject some energy into his limp climax.
Verdict: Super Hit.
Veera Dheera Sooran - Part 2 Movie Review: A solid action thriller undone by a conventional, weakly written third act.
Veera Dheera Sooran - Part 2 Movie Synopsis: A gangster who has given up his violent ways agrees to take up one last hit job to save his former boss' son, who is the target of a police officer seeking to settle an old score. With all three using his family as a threat to bend him to their will, can he outsmart them all and remain the last man standing?
Veera Dheera Sooran - Part 2 Movie Review: SU Arun Kumar's Veera Dheera Sooran begins in a most intriguing manner. The filmmaker drops us in the middle of a developing situation with hardly any setup to give us an idea of why things are happening. This instantly makes us get involved with the film - even though we hardly know anything about its plot or character. A woman lands up at the door of Periyavar/Ravi (Prudhvi Raj, cast against type in a serious role), a local big shot with criminal links, of doing away with her husband. Her husband, meanwhile, complains to SP Arunagiri (SJ Suryah, fine balancing the greyness of the character to keep us guessing) that his wife and daughter are missing. This provides the cop with the ammo that he's been looking for to take down Periyavar and his son Kannan (Suraj Venjaramoodu, making an impressive debut in Tamil), who had played dirty with him a decade ago. Arunagiri plots an encounter killing prompting Periyavar to reach out to his erstwhile viswasi Kaali (a robust Vikram who offers a peek into the mass avatar of his Dhool and Saamy days), who has given up his violent ways and is now leading a peaceful life with his wife Kalai (a competent Dushara Vijayan even makes us overlook the huge age gap between her and the male lead) and their two children. Arun Kumar keeps the tension alive by making Kaali vulnerable as he pits him against three individuals who he cannot trust and yet do their bidding as they slyly use his family as a threat in their own ways. At least until the intermission, the director holds back from giving us any peek into their shared history. All we get are mere mentions of events and names from their past - especially an incident that they refer to as 'Sudhakar sambavam' - which has led them all to this powder keg of a situation. This actually forces us, the audience, to individually imagine what might have happened, and pick characters to root for as well as hate.
And tense action keeps unfolding as there are cat-and-mouse-game-like scenarios and near-miss episodes that keep us hooked. One particular scene, involving landmines (or "kezhangu", as the characters call it) delivers edge-of-the-seat thrill, and another, which marks the meeting of Kaali and Arunagiri gives us a whistle-worthy mass masala moment. The film would have remained unique and engaging (and also justifying the Part 2 in the title) if Arun Kumar had trusted his audience and chosen to show us only the events that unfold during this one night. Perhaps he felt breaking the convention of providing a flashback would be too risky a move, but the director decides to give us the back story (at least the portions that matter), including the 'Sudhakar sambavam'. This is where the film begins to lose its individuality as the back story that we eventually get doesn't match with what we have all built up in our heads all through the first half; rather, it just feels so routine!
The film does recover from this minor setback when it gets back to the present with an ambitious one-shot set piece (shot with dynamism by Theni Eswar, whose night-time cinematography is one of the film's strong points) that begins with a group of characters discussing who among them could be the black sheep and moves on to a shootout between cops and gangsters, and then to a heroic moment. But then, just when we expect it to soar higher, it helplessly remains stuck on the ground. Like someone painstakingly building a house of cards and finally making a move that brings most of the structure down, Arun Kumar undoes all the earlier good work with a weakly written third act (despite its title, this is not the film where we can willingly suspend disbelief when its hero gets back up after being thrashed and even shot at by over a dozen men) that leaves us with a slightly bitter aftertaste. And the director himself seems to have realised this and decides to bank on nostalgia (yes, with THAT Vikram song!) to inject some energy into his limp climax.
Verdict: Super Hit.
Veera Dheera Sooran (2025)
Finally a serious Thriller from Tamil cinema, without any of those commercial Tamil cinema aesthetics, starring one of the great actors of this generation, Vikram.
Set within the events of single night, the story follows a retired henchman Kaali, who was forced to save his former crime boss's son from a police encounter.
Written and directed by S U ArunKumar under the banner of HR Pictures, helmed by Malayalam producer Riya, "Veera Dheera Sooran" is grounded in gritty reality, adopting a slow-burn tone reminiscent of Rajeev Ravi's films.
Without the typical commercial Tamil cinema elements, no songs, no intro, no slow motions, no theme music, no stylish edits, this is the closest a commercial Tamil film comes to pushing the boundaries of the thriller genre.
With great camera works, unsettling background score, and edgy screenplay, this is thriller Tamil cinema at it's finest.
Negatives - Suraj, a Tamil actor would have shinned in that role. Suraj was totally uncomfortable giving that authentic Tamil body language as well as dialogue delivery, that was a failed attempt. And the Female lead, totally a miscast and totally annoying portrayal.
Postives - Direction, Tone of the movie, G V Prakash's haunting score, and the whole technical crew for pulling off this grounded thriller. And also, Vikram Sir, what a performance, as a family man and as the loyal henchman. Hats off to him, for maintaining such a 35 year old looking physique at this age of 58.
In action scenes and emotional scenes, this man is legend. Seen many Swag moments from number of Heroes doing police station scenes. But this particular movie drools everything, never seen such a high impact police station scene in my life.
On top of it, during the climax portion, when the movie was going in the tone of a Rajiv Ravi thriller, suddenly we get a surprise nostalgic throw in the third act. Literally cried hearing "Madurai Veeran" song from 'Dhool', wow what a trip. Clapped, whistled, made my day.
Even such a high moment, the director didn't shoot it slow motion, he didn't even the blow off the air to heroes face to creat that iconic look. Without putting commercial elements even in action sequence, the director grounded the movie in such extreme levels.
I must say, this is seriously revamping of that old Tamil Village Hero movies.
Glad this movie happened, and it was produced with such charm. Vikram should do more of these Village Heroes movies like this.
I would give this movie a deserving 7/10.
This is Tamil Cinema at it's best.
Finally a serious Thriller from Tamil cinema, without any of those commercial Tamil cinema aesthetics, starring one of the great actors of this generation, Vikram.
Set within the events of single night, the story follows a retired henchman Kaali, who was forced to save his former crime boss's son from a police encounter.
Written and directed by S U ArunKumar under the banner of HR Pictures, helmed by Malayalam producer Riya, "Veera Dheera Sooran" is grounded in gritty reality, adopting a slow-burn tone reminiscent of Rajeev Ravi's films.
Without the typical commercial Tamil cinema elements, no songs, no intro, no slow motions, no theme music, no stylish edits, this is the closest a commercial Tamil film comes to pushing the boundaries of the thriller genre.
With great camera works, unsettling background score, and edgy screenplay, this is thriller Tamil cinema at it's finest.
Negatives - Suraj, a Tamil actor would have shinned in that role. Suraj was totally uncomfortable giving that authentic Tamil body language as well as dialogue delivery, that was a failed attempt. And the Female lead, totally a miscast and totally annoying portrayal.
Postives - Direction, Tone of the movie, G V Prakash's haunting score, and the whole technical crew for pulling off this grounded thriller. And also, Vikram Sir, what a performance, as a family man and as the loyal henchman. Hats off to him, for maintaining such a 35 year old looking physique at this age of 58.
In action scenes and emotional scenes, this man is legend. Seen many Swag moments from number of Heroes doing police station scenes. But this particular movie drools everything, never seen such a high impact police station scene in my life.
On top of it, during the climax portion, when the movie was going in the tone of a Rajiv Ravi thriller, suddenly we get a surprise nostalgic throw in the third act. Literally cried hearing "Madurai Veeran" song from 'Dhool', wow what a trip. Clapped, whistled, made my day.
Even such a high moment, the director didn't shoot it slow motion, he didn't even the blow off the air to heroes face to creat that iconic look. Without putting commercial elements even in action sequence, the director grounded the movie in such extreme levels.
I must say, this is seriously revamping of that old Tamil Village Hero movies.
Glad this movie happened, and it was produced with such charm. Vikram should do more of these Village Heroes movies like this.
I would give this movie a deserving 7/10.
This is Tamil Cinema at it's best.
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- Veera Dheera Soora
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- US$ 603.618
- Tempo de duração2 horas 42 minutos
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