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Akku Movie Stills & Picture Gallery (1 of 28)
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Akku_(1)
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Akku
Cast: Ajay, Sriji, Anu Haasan, Riyaz Khan, Rakshai
Direction: Maamani
Music: Sri Ram
A bomb is strapped to the hero’s shoe. The terrorist then
dumps the hero right in the middle
of Chennai city, and asks him to start running. If he stops
running, or even slows down, it
will explode. This is the simple but chilling premise of
this 90 minute Tamil thriler
without songs and without an interval. Directed by Maamani
(making his debut), Akku is the
first true thriller in Tamil cinema. Even if the movie does
not work always, the courage and
inventiness to breakaway from the song-dance formula is
heroic in itself, winning Akku high
marks for pushing the envelope of innovative, risk-taking
contemporary Kollywood cinema even
further.
Akku’s new hero and heroine are Ajay and Sriji. Very much in
love, they plan to elope. The
heroine’s brother (Rakshai), a terrorist, grabs the hero,
plants a shoe-bomb on him, takes
him to the heart of the city, and abandons him. This is no
small bomb but made from uranium,
and if Ajay stops running the city will explode. An
Assistant Police Commisioner(Riyaz Khan)
and a bomb diffusing expert (Anu Hassan) are called in to
find a solution. Can they come up
with an answer and save the city? And how long can the hero
keep running before he
collapses?
The movie references are obvious – from Speed to Phone Booth
to Cellular (and a little bit
of Run Lola Run?) – but Maamani makes the movie his own with
enough original thrills in the
plot that are not derived from other movies. The action
sequecnes are handled with aplomb.
Everything that happens, happens while Ajay is running,
making Akku feel like a Hollywood
thriller: the police keep him supplied with oxygen, steroids
and even scan his shoe to find
out what kind of bomb he’s carrying .
Chittibabu’s camerawork is exceptional, as it weaves through
the city shooting the running
hero. Riyaz Khan and Anu Hassan, who do fine work here, are
the only known names in Akku –
the others, including the crew, are new, and very talented.
The new couple, Ajay and Sriji,
are impressive in their debut. Rakshai playing the villain
(apparently a rank holder in
biochemistry) is especially effective. Also worth mentioning
are the crew: Venkatesh’s
dexterous editing and Sriram’s background music score (which
has to cue the audience on what
to feel at different moments) is evocative.
In a Wikipedia interview the scriptwriter-director Maamani
said, “Since I did not want the
screenplay to slow down, I decided not to have an interval.”
For this thriller to really
work effectively, and to make the audience feel the heat of
time running out, it will have
to play without an interval. Let’s hope that theatres
everywhere realize how crucial this is
to Akku’s time-bomb-ticking-plot and run it without the
interval. There are some holes in
the plot, the
acting is uneven (since it involves so many novices) and the
climax goes a little wrong. But
these are minor flaws in an otherwise deftly concieved and
shot thriiler. Akku could blaze a
new trend in Kollywood of taut genre thrillers, minus songs
and dances. Perhaps with a
bigger budget and stars it would have been a mega hit, but
even as it stands, it deserves to
be a hit.
Information courtesy:
www.MoviesBuzz.com
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