The moving struggle of a female law student fighting her own case to put a criminal behind bars. The plot further evaluates whether she really received justice by getting the criminal punish... Read allThe moving struggle of a female law student fighting her own case to put a criminal behind bars. The plot further evaluates whether she really received justice by getting the criminal punished.The moving struggle of a female law student fighting her own case to put a criminal behind bars. The plot further evaluates whether she really received justice by getting the criminal punished.
Krishna Hebbale
- Parathasarathy Brahma
- (as Hebbale Krishna)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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The concept chosen is good.But won't thrill you much.
Slow narration, clumsy screenplay and lack of seriousness in characters played puts the movie LAW into an average category.Ragini, who played lead character in this movie should have done her acting prep properly.Second half is just a deliberate watch after you're revealed with main twist at the interval.
Overall, it's a below average movie if you're a thriller genre freak.
Law is Kannada-language thriller (subtitled) that opens with a stereotypical take on incompetent, almost Keystone Cops-like misogynist authorities' reaction to a young girl, Nandini (Ragini Prajwal), claiming to have been gangraped. She, however, is a law student, so the proceedings get complicated and hardly as ludicrous as the opening depicts.
As the investigation unfolds, it's almost as if the infamous Indian paternalism, represented by the ignorant cops and a father denying his daughter help, has faded away, and the title is the real subject: Did the three young men really rape her or is her perseverance about revenge more than her pursuit of justice?
After the absurd opening and then the impressive proof Nandini, representing herself, presents against the three, the film settles into the shades of grey inherent in any court drama, with motives as moving as observable evidence. Director Ragu Samarth has a sure eye for cutting between the suspects and sufferers even if his cuts are too quick and flashbacks unhelpful because of the speed editing and his desire not to reveal the outcome too soon.
Along the way, the trial becomes the most fascinating part of the film with counterclaims and plot twists keeping the audience attentive and emotionally torn. Although there is a bit of Bollywood music and song and a share of absurdity, the heart of the action is truth and its service to justice.
Besides the sometimes-grating music and the rapid speech patterns of Southwest India, Law, like the series Law and Order, has much more than evidence and truth-it is exposing the weaknesses and depravity of humanity, together with a hope that honor will out. Not always, but those weaknesses make for frequently fascinating storytelling.
Law is part of the streaming Amazon Prime package.
As the investigation unfolds, it's almost as if the infamous Indian paternalism, represented by the ignorant cops and a father denying his daughter help, has faded away, and the title is the real subject: Did the three young men really rape her or is her perseverance about revenge more than her pursuit of justice?
After the absurd opening and then the impressive proof Nandini, representing herself, presents against the three, the film settles into the shades of grey inherent in any court drama, with motives as moving as observable evidence. Director Ragu Samarth has a sure eye for cutting between the suspects and sufferers even if his cuts are too quick and flashbacks unhelpful because of the speed editing and his desire not to reveal the outcome too soon.
Along the way, the trial becomes the most fascinating part of the film with counterclaims and plot twists keeping the audience attentive and emotionally torn. Although there is a bit of Bollywood music and song and a share of absurdity, the heart of the action is truth and its service to justice.
Besides the sometimes-grating music and the rapid speech patterns of Southwest India, Law, like the series Law and Order, has much more than evidence and truth-it is exposing the weaknesses and depravity of humanity, together with a hope that honor will out. Not always, but those weaknesses make for frequently fascinating storytelling.
Law is part of the streaming Amazon Prime package.
Started watching it with great expectations as prk productions are famous in producing quality movies like kavaludaari, mayabazaar etc. But this is a crap. The lead actress is pretty but she has delivered a below average performance. The storyline is somewhat like copied from other movies. The movie genre is crime thriller, but it has definitely failed to thrill the audience. The screenplay is worst in the entire movie which makes the movie dull. It would have been an average watch if the editing and screenplay was good.
Details
- Runtime
- 2h 4m(124 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 16:9 HD
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