What Is Good
- Rajinikanth
- Cinematography
- Art Work
- BGM
What Is Bad
- Dragged pace
- Editing
- Runtime
- Screenplay
- Direction
- Fights
- Songs.
Lingeswara (Rajinikanth) plays the scion of a royal family who
returns to India after getting ICS studies in England. British appoint
him as a collector to Singanoor. The drought situations and the water
scarcity move him to the core and he plans to build a dam with the help
of Britishers. But things turn around and he resigns his post as
collector. Later, King of Gadwal Lingeswara plans to build Singanoor dam
with his own expense and with the help of Singanoor villagers. With
huge struggle and pressures he completes building the dam. Due to a
major misunderstanding Lingeswara leaves the place and villagers lock
the temple. After 70 years, Kasi Viswanath makes villagers realize the
importance of reopening the Temple with the descendant of Lingeswara.
Who is Lingeswara’s heir? Will he help the troubled villagers? forms the
rest of the story.
Lingaa Review - Star Performance
Rajinikanth has given wondrous performance in a dual role with
different get-ups. His mannerisms – vintage look in the pre-independence
character is a good watch. Maximum Superstar energy is extracted from
the choreographers. Anushka Shetty put on more weight for this film, in
which her character is given less weight age. Debutant Sonakshi Sinha is
fine her role, dubbing suited character well. Santhanam, Karunakaran
and Brahmanandam failed to tickle some funny tunes. Kasi Viswanath,
Vijay Kumar, Dev Gill, Ponvannan are okay in their limited roles.
Jagapati Babu does not have much role to play in this film.
Lingaa Review - Techinical Team
There is a lot of confusion as to what the director really had to
portray in the film. The storyline has an uncanny resemblance to the
Telugu film ‘Indra’.
The story of Lingaa, written by Pon Kumaran tries to talk about too many things at once. The story addresses linking of national rivers and have timeworn social angle. This film does a decent job of denoting the conflict, even mixing emotion with a bit of punches effectively, but after a while, when we are clearly aware of the strong message the film-makers are resolute on conveying, it becomes a bit too repetitive. It treads a very thin line and often borders on being overtly preachy (I didn't fail, I just postponed my success) rather than an entertainer. The screenplay, penned by K S Ravikumar and Pon Kumaran makes such a mingle-mangle of the whole story that the audience is left blasé and supremely disinterested by the end.
On the music front, the arrangement part of A R Rahman’s music was better than his compositions. The track “Mona Mona Gasolina” best of the album. The background score is fine, aptly matches the gorgeous locations on the screen. Now about the best part of the movie which is its bedazing cinematography. The unexplored locations of Karnataka like Linganamakki dam in Shimoga district, Jog falls is something never seen before on the south screen. The visual appeal of the movie is simply spectacular and unique. The major disappointment of the film is its pace. It fails to grip the audience to the point of understanding what is going on and why. The story wins when audience wants to see dam gets completed. But the wait, the story takes a good 174 minutes to get to this point. Scenes near the end of the film feel too long and some editing scissors would have harmed this drama which rather stretches almost three hours. Fights in the film over the top and the final act just fail to excite the audience. Art work deserves a special mention for their work in the Pre-Independence era. The production values of Rockline Entertainment are fine.
The story of Lingaa, written by Pon Kumaran tries to talk about too many things at once. The story addresses linking of national rivers and have timeworn social angle. This film does a decent job of denoting the conflict, even mixing emotion with a bit of punches effectively, but after a while, when we are clearly aware of the strong message the film-makers are resolute on conveying, it becomes a bit too repetitive. It treads a very thin line and often borders on being overtly preachy (I didn't fail, I just postponed my success) rather than an entertainer. The screenplay, penned by K S Ravikumar and Pon Kumaran makes such a mingle-mangle of the whole story that the audience is left blasé and supremely disinterested by the end.
On the music front, the arrangement part of A R Rahman’s music was better than his compositions. The track “Mona Mona Gasolina” best of the album. The background score is fine, aptly matches the gorgeous locations on the screen. Now about the best part of the movie which is its bedazing cinematography. The unexplored locations of Karnataka like Linganamakki dam in Shimoga district, Jog falls is something never seen before on the south screen. The visual appeal of the movie is simply spectacular and unique. The major disappointment of the film is its pace. It fails to grip the audience to the point of understanding what is going on and why. The story wins when audience wants to see dam gets completed. But the wait, the story takes a good 174 minutes to get to this point. Scenes near the end of the film feel too long and some editing scissors would have harmed this drama which rather stretches almost three hours. Fights in the film over the top and the final act just fail to excite the audience. Art work deserves a special mention for their work in the Pre-Independence era. The production values of Rockline Entertainment are fine.
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