Theeran Adhigaram Ondru: An overlong but solid cop film, despite flaws

This Vinoth-directorial isn’t your usual Tamil cop film, but that sadly doesn’t stop it from being crippled by some usual issues
Theeran Adhigaram Ondru: An overlong but solid cop film, despite flaws

The best bits in Theeran Adhigaram Ondru for me were the jokes. Vinoth’s a director who’s not above having irreverent fun with his material. He did that with his debut film, Sathurangavettai, but here, it must have been harder. This film, based on a true story, is about righteous policemen and ruthless dacoits. On paper, an intense story like this shouldn’t lend naturally to such humour, but Vinoth finds a way to write in some genuinely funny moments. In one scene, DSP Theeran (Karthi, who is immense in the role), who’s been frustrated in his attempts to get any leads in his case, is finally on the cusp of a breakthrough. He needs to capture the bad guy in a crowd, and do this quietly. It’s a serious scene, but Theeran’s idea to shut the guy up after surrounding him with policemen in disguise? Stuff his mouth with a couple of bananas. It’s very hard not to laugh.

In that sense, Theeran isn’t your average Tamil cinema cop. It’s made clear right from his training days when he, unlike his colleagues, shows that his investigative techniques aren’t inspired by Tamil films (a dig by the police chief). He believes in observation and analysis, and above all, in using his mouth very little. If Aaruchaamy and Doraisingam decided to do this, we wouldn’t even have one film featuring them, let alone a franchise. Theeran is the sort of cop to throw a quick look at an accident scene and figure who’s at fault. Later, he spends a few minutes at a crime scene and unearths a body that policemen till then failed to spot. Theeran Adhigaram Ondru is what happens when this righteous, intelligent officer meets his match in a gang of dacoits, whose leader, despite apparently hating ‘intelligence’, employs intelligent methods to avoid being caught. It’s a group that gives Theeran sleepless nights, and he just doesn’t get how other policemen are able to eat and sleep, while these criminals are on the prowl.

Director: H Vinoth
Cast: Karthi, Rakul Preet Singh, Abhimanyu Singh

I enjoyed how Vinoth doesn’t give you instant gratification. Theeran, much like real policemen, has to undergo an almighty struggle before he can come in the vicinity of the guys he’s hunting. Almost an hour into the film, at a crucial, tense juncture, the timing seems perfect for the heroic arrival of Theeran. His wife’s in danger, some people have been killed, and he’s on the way. Another masala film director would announce the arrival with loud background music, and bring you the hero in slo-mo. But Vinoth isn’t done teasing. He gives you the heroic arrival, yes, but not of Theeran. He brings somebody else to equally rousing reception: an adult German Shepherd which has its own tragic backstory. It’s a lovely little touch.

So, yes, Theeran Adhigaram Ondru isn’t your usual Tamil cop film, but that sadly doesn’t stop it from being crippled by some usual issues. The love angle is wholly dispensable, regardless of what Theeran’s manipulative voice-over will make you believe. Vinoth tries his best to salvage this track. He introduces a certain physicality to their relationship that makes proceedings quite lively. Theeran and Priya (Rakul Preet Singh, who’s a sprightly little presence) are all over each other. They are mock-hurting each other, and in one scene when Theeran makes a breakthrough in his case, he shows his elation by biting Priya’s shoulder. Vinoth also milks this track for some humour, but ultimately, little comes of this relationship. It’s hard to empathise with Theeran because even he doesn’t seem particularly perturbed. The occasional apologist voice-over tries to make amends, but after all the work done to establish their relationship, Theeran needed to be shown in more vulnerable, hurt light, in her absence.

Being a policeman, of course, means putting family behind. And the case Theeran handles makes matters worse because he’s forced to lumber across the country. He isn’t in search of a single villain, but a group — one that rather reminded me a lot of the Dothraki in Game of Thrones. This group too lacks a respect for the law of the land, are loyal to one another, operate by their own code of ethics, are obsessed with spoils, and towards the end, are shown to be pretty decent on horses too. Vinoth paints them more in black than in grey though, even if you get a quick voice-over with some impressive VFX work trying to explain why they may have been pushed by circumstances to adapt this way of life. But much like the voice-over in Theeran’s love story, this too seems rushed. But the pillaging scenes are all executed impressively. In one raid, the brutality is almost stylised, as live action melds into sketches. It may be odd to say this, but it is quite beautiful to behold.

Perhaps the biggest problem in Theeran Adhigaram Ondru is how overlong it seems. As Theeran’s chasing the bad guys towards the end, he isn’t the only one exhausted. Part of the love you feel for the film is also watered down by this inability to wrap up things efficiently, and also by the inclusion of disappointing elements like the outdated villain-item-number, which I’d wrongly come to believe was a thing of the past.

I was also rather uncomfortable with all the romanticising of police encounters. In Vinoth’s defence, he’s constantly trying to show how policemen work despite their bosses and the politicians, not because of them; but it’s alarming to see, for instance, how trigger-happy Theeran is. At the end, there’s an emotional argument for why Theeran and team deserve a lot more than they get, but I’m not so sure at all, given some of their interrogation methods, for one. Theeran’s team, among other offences, is guilty of backhanded methods to extend custody of a man whose guilt they are convinced by due to hearsay. In one scene, his boss, the police chief, asks him to close the case by framing two random people. With such people flagrantly misusing authority, it’s ironical that Theeran Adhigaram Ondru romanticises policemen taking the law into their hands, and almost makes a joke out of torture methods that are used to draw confessions. Vinoth expects you to be rather saddened by the job Theeran ends up with eventually, but on some level, I was mildly relieved.

Related Stories

No stories found.
X
Cinema Express
www.cinemaexpress.com