R Ravikumar’s ‘Ayalaan’ is too generic to make an impact, but it is a harmless watch

The film stars Sivakarthikeyan and Rakul Preet Singh. The visual effects are very good, and make you wish the writing, too, was up to that level.

 

In an early scene in Ayalaan, from director R Ravikumar, the hero Tamizh (Sivakarthikeyan) saves a baby elephant that has fallen into a pit – but not before delivering a small lecture about how we have made the lives of elephants difficult by usurping their land and installing electric fences and so on. A little later, an impressively CG-ed alien lands on earth and reads up about humans – but also about the waste we leave behind, like polythene bags that take centuries to degrade. In a recent interview with Galatta Plus, the director spoke thoughtfully and eloquently about what he called the “Tamizh genre”. He was right. Despite the sci-fi premise, Ayalaan is Agmark Tamil cinema. It has mini-lectures. It has mini-messages, like how we are so glued to our phones that we would not notice an alien even if it landed in our midst. It has an eco-warrior hero against a corporate villain.

You could say the alien is almost an afterthought. In Indru Netru Naalai, Ravikumar’s first feature, the sci-fi premise revolved around a time machine, which is a very unique and specific device. Going back and forth in time is something that gives your plot a flavour that nothing else can give. But an alien that gives the hero its powers is a bit… redundant. Our heroes are already superhuman when they take on corporate villains. Why do they need extra-terrestrial help? The screenplay does not really chart brand-new territory. It has two sequences of kids that have to be rescued from fire. The villain even decides to change what he does, which leads a baffled character to exclaim: “What the hell – now we are making weapons?” Exactly! The one true bit of inspired sci-fi writing involves a little girl with cancer. I wish she had been fleshed out better instead of just being brought in when needed, but the idea is solid! Ayalaan takes a long time to take off, and that’s a sin for a plot so generic. And once the alien lands, there are comedy routines like having Yogi Babu coming out of a bath and dropping his towel in front of the creature.

Rakul Preet Singh contributes absolutely nothing as a random lady who teaches science. But the film is a harmless watch, mainly due to its leading man. Sivakarthikeyan in comic mode is always a pleasure. (I liked Prince. Deal with it!) Some of the one-liners given to Yogi Babu and Karunakaran are quite funny. And when an early scene involves a locust burping after its swarm has ravaged a field of sunflowers, you know who the target audience is. The kids in my theatre were giggling. Mission accomplished, I guess! The kid inside me, though, wanted to run home and watch E.T. for the 769th time.

YouTube player

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top