Thug Life
- 2025
- 2h 45m
Gang leader Sakthivel adopts Amaran after saving him during a gang war. Years later, Sakthivel survives an assassination attempt and suspects Amaran's involvement, leading to a conflict of l... Read allGang leader Sakthivel adopts Amaran after saving him during a gang war. Years later, Sakthivel survives an assassination attempt and suspects Amaran's involvement, leading to a conflict of loyalty and revenge.Gang leader Sakthivel adopts Amaran after saving him during a gang war. Years later, Sakthivel survives an assassination attempt and suspects Amaran's involvement, leading to a conflict of loyalty and revenge.
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A predictable and average story, with awkward connections that struggled to keep the story cogent.
After the fist 40 mins the plot took an abject turn for the bad and never looked back as it meandered towards worse for the next or so 2 hours.
Music and BGM were barely a saving grace, only because the story was busy plumbing new depths.
I wondered walking out of the movie how on earth accomplished creators managed to come up with this mediocrity. Wasn't there a soul that watched it and said, nah, this isn't cutting it?
As someone that grew up revering Nayagan, I was sorely disappointed with Thug Life. The mediocrity began with the name I guess.
After the fist 40 mins the plot took an abject turn for the bad and never looked back as it meandered towards worse for the next or so 2 hours.
Music and BGM were barely a saving grace, only because the story was busy plumbing new depths.
I wondered walking out of the movie how on earth accomplished creators managed to come up with this mediocrity. Wasn't there a soul that watched it and said, nah, this isn't cutting it?
As someone that grew up revering Nayagan, I was sorely disappointed with Thug Life. The mediocrity began with the name I guess.
Let me start with a quote from Ulaganayagan Kamal Haasan himself:
"When mediocrity has been set as standard, rubbish is acceptable. Acceptable becomes extraordinary; and extraordinary becomes genius."
Yeah, Thug Life is beyond mediocrity and an undeniable career nadir for all involved!
This quote, uttered by the very man whose name graces the poster of Thug Life, serves as a cruel, ironic harbinger of what's to come. You see Kamal Haasan and Atman Silambarasan's names, and a tiny, foolish hope sparks in your heart. You think, "How can this film not be good?" And then you get this... rubbish!
It's not the absolute worst film ever made, but that quote, man, that quote just hits you in the face. All these big names, all this supposed "talent," teaming up. It should have been a novelty. Instead, it felt like some old sugar daddy ego trip between Kamal and Simbu, gushing over Trisha "Maami."
What the hell happened to Mani Ratnam? His schtick is so worn out. His movies these days have these weird, pathetic patterns, especially with the scandalous MANI affairs. Is he secretly living out his suppressed fantasies through his films?
And don't even get me started on the female characters. Trisha was total misfit, sounding like an utterly wasted side dish at a local bar. If she thinks she's ready for a gritty role like a femme fatale, or sex worker, she needs to spend some time in a beginner's acting class hit up YouTube and just study Anushka Shetty in Vaanam on repeat until she gets it. Well, Abhirami looked like she was mentally checked out.
The main reason I kept watching was, obviously, the cast. Both Kamal and Simbu are known as the godfathers of loquaciousness, reeking of solipsism (though STR has chilled out a bit lately).
My expectations were already six feet under, because I've never been a fan of Mani Ratnam's watered-down nonsense. He's made two or three decent ones, but most of his dozen-plus movies are stale, over-hyped duds. Who's keeping this guy relevant? The "elite film bros" who only watch mainstream Thai arthouse or French New Wave and think anything with a "HONG SANG ZOOOOM" is KINO? He's still around because of these dumb bozos who hype him up. They're like a cult performing last rites for his career, claiming he's just "evolving."
Even the rest of the cast and crew's talent felt wasted. It was all so fake. I knew it right away in that opening scene where Nassar's daughter gets pregnant and meets this slimeball guy playing a wannabe rockstar, singing "liberty, liberty, liberty" imagining a Rage Against the Machine-type banger. That girl commits suicide, and what's "funny" is she has a poster of Jim Morrison in her room. Such a disgrace! Die, poser! And these "elite bozos" think they're so cultured, can't think beyond Bob Marley, Morrison, Slipknot, Linkin Park, Iron Maiden, Beatles, and other mainstream trash. Please, give me a break!
The first half fleeting moments had its moments of sanity, which were, ironically, the only good parts. Even the thematic elements in the first half felt nice, with Shakthivel (Kamal) haunted by death, betrayal, guilt. This could have been so nice if explored well. The opening B&W episode was good, a brief glimpse. And the way Amar (Simbu) tells Shakti about Mangai's marriage proposal was staged well. For a second, the first half felt good with characters brewing distrust, almost planning each other's demise. But then it just fizzled out. The callback to Cheetah's Vivegam in the interval is inevitable here.
I really wanted more dialogue-driven scenes, not just fists flying like a street fight and fist-flying mocobots. And yeah, I appreciated some of the conversations. But honestly, there was nothing deep enough to make me care about the characters or anything they were blabbering about.
The action scenes? At some points, the film seemed like WWE backyard fights coming straight out of a teenage boy's juvenile imagination. The background score was terrible, and the songs got chopped up so badly, it was annoying even to AR Rahman Kannis.
In the end, Thug Life fails at everything it tries to be. It's not gritty, shocking, real, dark, entertaining, or original. It's just Kamal and Simbu's ego trip, barely holding this sinking ship together with duct tape. This is just kuppai (trash)! Fed up.
"When mediocrity has been set as standard, rubbish is acceptable. Acceptable becomes extraordinary; and extraordinary becomes genius."
Yeah, Thug Life is beyond mediocrity and an undeniable career nadir for all involved!
This quote, uttered by the very man whose name graces the poster of Thug Life, serves as a cruel, ironic harbinger of what's to come. You see Kamal Haasan and Atman Silambarasan's names, and a tiny, foolish hope sparks in your heart. You think, "How can this film not be good?" And then you get this... rubbish!
It's not the absolute worst film ever made, but that quote, man, that quote just hits you in the face. All these big names, all this supposed "talent," teaming up. It should have been a novelty. Instead, it felt like some old sugar daddy ego trip between Kamal and Simbu, gushing over Trisha "Maami."
What the hell happened to Mani Ratnam? His schtick is so worn out. His movies these days have these weird, pathetic patterns, especially with the scandalous MANI affairs. Is he secretly living out his suppressed fantasies through his films?
And don't even get me started on the female characters. Trisha was total misfit, sounding like an utterly wasted side dish at a local bar. If she thinks she's ready for a gritty role like a femme fatale, or sex worker, she needs to spend some time in a beginner's acting class hit up YouTube and just study Anushka Shetty in Vaanam on repeat until she gets it. Well, Abhirami looked like she was mentally checked out.
The main reason I kept watching was, obviously, the cast. Both Kamal and Simbu are known as the godfathers of loquaciousness, reeking of solipsism (though STR has chilled out a bit lately).
My expectations were already six feet under, because I've never been a fan of Mani Ratnam's watered-down nonsense. He's made two or three decent ones, but most of his dozen-plus movies are stale, over-hyped duds. Who's keeping this guy relevant? The "elite film bros" who only watch mainstream Thai arthouse or French New Wave and think anything with a "HONG SANG ZOOOOM" is KINO? He's still around because of these dumb bozos who hype him up. They're like a cult performing last rites for his career, claiming he's just "evolving."
Even the rest of the cast and crew's talent felt wasted. It was all so fake. I knew it right away in that opening scene where Nassar's daughter gets pregnant and meets this slimeball guy playing a wannabe rockstar, singing "liberty, liberty, liberty" imagining a Rage Against the Machine-type banger. That girl commits suicide, and what's "funny" is she has a poster of Jim Morrison in her room. Such a disgrace! Die, poser! And these "elite bozos" think they're so cultured, can't think beyond Bob Marley, Morrison, Slipknot, Linkin Park, Iron Maiden, Beatles, and other mainstream trash. Please, give me a break!
The first half fleeting moments had its moments of sanity, which were, ironically, the only good parts. Even the thematic elements in the first half felt nice, with Shakthivel (Kamal) haunted by death, betrayal, guilt. This could have been so nice if explored well. The opening B&W episode was good, a brief glimpse. And the way Amar (Simbu) tells Shakti about Mangai's marriage proposal was staged well. For a second, the first half felt good with characters brewing distrust, almost planning each other's demise. But then it just fizzled out. The callback to Cheetah's Vivegam in the interval is inevitable here.
I really wanted more dialogue-driven scenes, not just fists flying like a street fight and fist-flying mocobots. And yeah, I appreciated some of the conversations. But honestly, there was nothing deep enough to make me care about the characters or anything they were blabbering about.
The action scenes? At some points, the film seemed like WWE backyard fights coming straight out of a teenage boy's juvenile imagination. The background score was terrible, and the songs got chopped up so badly, it was annoying even to AR Rahman Kannis.
In the end, Thug Life fails at everything it tries to be. It's not gritty, shocking, real, dark, entertaining, or original. It's just Kamal and Simbu's ego trip, barely holding this sinking ship together with duct tape. This is just kuppai (trash)! Fed up.
Yep, this is the weakest storytelling I've ever seen in a Mani Ratnam film. Even Kadal and Kaatru Veliyidai come across as better (storytelling) efforts in comparison. What the heck happened to Kamal Haasan? Just because Vikram worked, he's decidedly gone the "action hero" route, playing roles with zero emotional depth or connect. Rangaraya Sakthivel is a cardboard cutout, and so is the entire bunch of characters that revolve around him. The actors (Simbu and Joju George, especially) try their best to rise above the wafer-thin script, offering mild hopes in the first half. But you're in for the most generic revenge-action-drama in the second.
The action blocks (choreographed by Anbariv) are not individually terrible -- in fact, there are a couple of standout attempts, such as a train station fight and a car chase that concludes at the Red Fort, which are quite exciting. ARR's score was really oscillating both ways -- solid as well as subpar (the whole snow sequence had me cringing like hell). Some of the songs are good too, like Jinguchaa, adding a little zing to the overall dull proceedings. Anju Vanna Poove is such a nice track, but the way the film incorporates bits and pieces of it in a scattered way didn't win me over.
Thug Life starts solidly, with a well-done flashback sequence presented in monochrome. The de-aging work is appreciable too; I'm almost sensing a pattern here. In films that get the de-aging process right, the rest of the VFX (like an avalanche sequence) is often so shoddy. The characterizations of Indrani (Trisha), Amar (Simbu), and Dr. Anna (Aishwarya Lekshmi) only look fascinating on the surface. Deep down, they're all one-note with a specific purpose to fulfill.
DoP Ravi K Chandran offers some spectacular frames, though sadly, the film's screenplay doesn't do justice. I'm really appalled by (National Award Winner) Sreekar Prasad's edit work in the film; there's hardly any connective tissue between scenes. Everything is simply stacked together, with no sense of emotional understanding. The larger blame definitely goes to the script (co-written by Ratnam and Haasan), but still. What was even that embarrassment of a climax? Gosh.
The action blocks (choreographed by Anbariv) are not individually terrible -- in fact, there are a couple of standout attempts, such as a train station fight and a car chase that concludes at the Red Fort, which are quite exciting. ARR's score was really oscillating both ways -- solid as well as subpar (the whole snow sequence had me cringing like hell). Some of the songs are good too, like Jinguchaa, adding a little zing to the overall dull proceedings. Anju Vanna Poove is such a nice track, but the way the film incorporates bits and pieces of it in a scattered way didn't win me over.
Thug Life starts solidly, with a well-done flashback sequence presented in monochrome. The de-aging work is appreciable too; I'm almost sensing a pattern here. In films that get the de-aging process right, the rest of the VFX (like an avalanche sequence) is often so shoddy. The characterizations of Indrani (Trisha), Amar (Simbu), and Dr. Anna (Aishwarya Lekshmi) only look fascinating on the surface. Deep down, they're all one-note with a specific purpose to fulfill.
DoP Ravi K Chandran offers some spectacular frames, though sadly, the film's screenplay doesn't do justice. I'm really appalled by (National Award Winner) Sreekar Prasad's edit work in the film; there's hardly any connective tissue between scenes. Everything is simply stacked together, with no sense of emotional understanding. The larger blame definitely goes to the script (co-written by Ratnam and Haasan), but still. What was even that embarrassment of a climax? Gosh.
This gangster movie is full of wonderful locations, sets, songs, visuals, bgm but if you're not a Kamal Hassan fan there's little for you to empathize with.
Mani Ratnam's trade mark dialogues and ARR's pumped up score do add a lot of sizzle to this stylish gangster movie. Simbu gives a rooted performance that has complex emotions to act upon.
The cinematography and editing are fantastic especially in the song sequences that are slickly intercut with action.
The action itself is visceral and after a point a little exhausting rather than exhilarating. Maybe it's intentional. Maybe it's meant to remind us that all violence is eventually futile.
It's not preachy though and that's a saving grace. The emotions run by very quickly and have too little an impact to carry the core of the movie through while it's clawing its way out of a revenge saga.
There's no lack of back stabbing analogies from the Mughals to the Mahabharata. But the love stories in this movie are the weakest links in it unfortunately. Especially given how much as a Mani Ratnam fan you expect this fairytale romance out of his movies. If only he spent a little more time on them to make us feel something when the love falls prey to violence it would have been the masterpiece that I was expecting from this duo.
Still worth your time. A little more heart would have made it great.
Mani Ratnam's trade mark dialogues and ARR's pumped up score do add a lot of sizzle to this stylish gangster movie. Simbu gives a rooted performance that has complex emotions to act upon.
The cinematography and editing are fantastic especially in the song sequences that are slickly intercut with action.
The action itself is visceral and after a point a little exhausting rather than exhilarating. Maybe it's intentional. Maybe it's meant to remind us that all violence is eventually futile.
It's not preachy though and that's a saving grace. The emotions run by very quickly and have too little an impact to carry the core of the movie through while it's clawing its way out of a revenge saga.
There's no lack of back stabbing analogies from the Mughals to the Mahabharata. But the love stories in this movie are the weakest links in it unfortunately. Especially given how much as a Mani Ratnam fan you expect this fairytale romance out of his movies. If only he spent a little more time on them to make us feel something when the love falls prey to violence it would have been the masterpiece that I was expecting from this duo.
Still worth your time. A little more heart would have made it great.
The story is actually pretty good, but man, the screenplay really doesn't do it justice. Most of the scenes feel dull-some are okay, and only a few are actually good. It's just not that engaging overall.
Kamal Haasan, as much as we all love him, just doesn't sell the action scenes this time. Sorry, but he's not exactly convincing when the punches start flying.
Trisha is a total disappointment. She's different from what we usually see, She looks amazing, and she acts really well too. But her character? Let's just say the writing didn't do her any favours; her character arc is poorly written.
Simbhu? Gave his best. Abhirami, Joju, Nazar, Ashok Selvan and the rest are wasted, but Aishwarya Lakshmi stands out.
The cinematography and music? Top-notch. The sound effects and mixing are also really well done.
Production values are fancy, and the VFX and de-aging tech look pretty decent too.
And of course, Maniratnam shows us once again why he's the master in Direction but this is one of his weakest works.
Watch only if you like these kinds of movies. Don't expect too much violence, over-the-top music, or a super fast pace-it's a clumsy mix of commercial and artsy.
Kamal Haasan, as much as we all love him, just doesn't sell the action scenes this time. Sorry, but he's not exactly convincing when the punches start flying.
Trisha is a total disappointment. She's different from what we usually see, She looks amazing, and she acts really well too. But her character? Let's just say the writing didn't do her any favours; her character arc is poorly written.
Simbhu? Gave his best. Abhirami, Joju, Nazar, Ashok Selvan and the rest are wasted, but Aishwarya Lakshmi stands out.
The cinematography and music? Top-notch. The sound effects and mixing are also really well done.
Production values are fancy, and the VFX and de-aging tech look pretty decent too.
And of course, Maniratnam shows us once again why he's the master in Direction but this is one of his weakest works.
Watch only if you like these kinds of movies. Don't expect too much violence, over-the-top music, or a super fast pace-it's a clumsy mix of commercial and artsy.
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Did you know
- TriviaIn May 2024, shortly after Silambarasan's participation in the film was confirmed, producer Ishari K. Ganesh demanded his removal, alleging there was an active "red card" issued by the Tamil Film Producers Council to the actor that prohibits him from accepting new projects. However, Silambarasan denied having received a red card.
- SoundtracksKing of Thugs
Original Theme Arranged, Composed, Mixed, Mastered, Orchestrated, and Performed by A.R. Rahman
- How long is Thug Life?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime2 hours 45 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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