'Trivandrum Lodge' (Malayalam)
By Anil R Nair, ENS
16th October 2012 11:00 AM
-
The poster of 'Trivandrum Lodge'.
'Trivandrum Lodge' (Malayalam)
Director: V Prakash
Cast: Anoop Menon, Jayasurya, Saiju Kurup, Honey Rose
Yesteryear directors Bharathan and Padmarajan handled the subject of unsealed sexuality, often considered taboo in a hypocritical society, in the most aesthetic and sensual way in the 1980s. They were the masters and indubitably, they remain so. They received aplenty of accolades for going ‘out of the box’ at a time when love and lust remained in the darkness of the four walls. When they experimented with real life incidents or fantasy, it set a new benchmark.
Come 2012; welcome to ‘Trivandrum Lodge’. Writer-actor Anoop Menon’s latest attempt to expose the world of a sex-starved section of society, however, fails to flare up the passions of movie aficionados. Anoop, arguably the brand ambassador of new age cinema, and director V K Prakash try to emulate their predecessors’ success formula through an unconventional script format, but in vain.
In the first half, you enter into the dark world where everybody thinks, speaks and does sex (only SEX!). They talk with no qualms about their desires, fantasies and frustrations. Wondering where is this wacky abode? This ancient, torn building is owned by a rich realtor and widower Ravi Shankar (Anoop Menon) and maintained, as he claims, in memory of his dead wife.
The versatile society has its resemblance in the lodge; the inmates include Abdhu (Jayasurya) an uneducated orphan, music teacher Relton (Janardhanan), Peggy (Sukumari), who runs a small hotel inside the lodge, small-time film journalist Sunil Vellayani (Saiju Kurup), and Kora (Balachandran) who boasts of having sex with 999 women and wishes to have a police woman as his 1000th.
Most of them suffer from the desire-the carnal appetite. A major part of the film is dedicated to portray the romance of two kids and explain the sexual fantasies of a married woman and her just divorced friend Dhwani (Honey Rose), who wants to “fornicate with abandon”. It also gives a peep into the life of a prostitute (Padmarajan effect).
Dhwani comes to stay in the lodge with a cliched ambition — to write a novel. Jayasurya rises a notch above the rest. The sex-laced lodge story, with excessive double-meaning dialogues and open discussions about sexual encounters of many (strange) characters may be enough to entice the teenagers. Ravi Shankar’s philosophical talk on celibacy is a drag. We also hear sermons about sexual liberation from fashionably dressed new age women. Streetwalkers give a mouthful of unrefined talks about lust and life. But the weak story line makes the characters float in the air and the entire plot looks superficial.
The verdict: Tries to break social barriers, but fails to rise above average.
Recent Activity
- India's bleeding insurgencies: Lessons from Latin America
- Western Ghat report has imperialist mindset: Ecologist
- Lot more to India-China ties than border stand-off: Experts
- Major industrial conglomerates making a beeline for Haryana
- Man kidnapped 23 years ago finds kin thanks to Google Maps
- Bangalore's techies start 'brand tattoos' craze
- Indian circuses struggle to adapt after court bans
- Want hassle-free tatkal ticket? Personally visit special counters
- Rs 8K-crore plan for upgrading ICVs of Army
- Man arrested for attempt to attack TV host Ranjini Haridas
- Kalabhavan Mani missing after assaulting forest staff
- Sreesanth, 2 other players 'confess'; more players under scanner
- Tamil Brahmi script dating to 500 BC found near Erode
- Shift me from ‘Anda’ cell, pleads Sanjay Dutt
- Meghalaya's CMJ University faces probe after awarding suspicious PhDs
- The toxic truth about ripe mangoes
Post a Comment