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Kadaseela Biriyani

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Kadaseela Biriyani
Theatrical release poster
Directed byNishanth Kalidindi
Screenplay byNishanth Kalidindi
Vivekanand Kalaivanan
Story byNishanth Kalidindi
Produced byS. Sashikanth
Chakravarthy Ramachandra
Nishanth Kalidindi
StarringVasanth Selvam
Dinesh Mani
Vijay Ram
Hakkim Shah
Narrated byVijay Sethupathi
CinematographyAzeem Mohammad
Hestin Jose Joseph
Edited byIgnatious Aswin
Music byVinoth Thanigasalam
Neil Sebastian
Judah Paul
Production
company
Distributed byYNOTX
Release date
  • 19 November 2021 (2021-11-19)
Running time
113 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil

Kadaseela Biriyani (transl.Biryani in the end) is a 2021 Indian Tamil-language black comedy film directed and co-written by Nishanth Kalidindi in his debut.[1] The directorial debut of Nishanth Kalidindi, it was shot in 2016 and completed in 2018,[2] but was released theatrically over three years later on 19 November 2021.[1] The film stars Vasanth Selvam, Dinesh Mani and Vijay Ram and met with positive reviews.[3][4][5] Set in Kottayam, Kerala, the film contains Malayalam dialogues.[1] Three brothers break into the rubber estate to avenge their father's death, but fate has cruel plans as they are welcomed by the landlord's psychopath son.[6]

Plot

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The narrator, Vijay Sethupathi, recounts the tale of Chikku Pandi (Vijay Ram), who as a young child is removed from the rest of his family by his father, who wishes to protect him from their violent criminal ways and instead raise him to lead a simple peaceful life. Chikku concentrates on his studies, hoping to meet his father's ambition of becoming a doctor. However when Chikku turns 16, his father is murdered by the owner of a large rubber plantation, Sathyan (Vishaal Ram). Chikku reunites with his older brothers Periya Pandi (Vasanth Selvam) and Ila Pandi (Dinesh Mani), who pressure him into a plan to avenge their father's death by killing Sathyan. The three brothers travel to Sathyan's rubber plantation in Kanjirappally, Kerala. Expecting to have to kill several of Sathyan's workers to gain access, they instead find the plantation deserted. At Sathyan's house they see that Sathyan's son Johan Kariya (Hakkim Shah), a notorious psychopath, has unexpectedly returned home, causing the plantation workers to flee in fear. The brothers overhear an argument between Johan and his father, during which Johan taunts his father by revealing that he had killed his father's mistress and burnt their son alive. Johan mocks his father's grief.

Ila Pandi wants to abort the mission but Periya Pandi insists they proceed with the plan to avenge their father's death. They sneak into the house, tie up Sathyan and move him into the nearby forest. Ila Pandi, who is acting as lookout, is discovered by Johan who questions him. Periya Pandi comes to his aid, claiming to Johan that they had stumbled upon the house while looking for their brother. Johan is sceptical, but Chikku distracts him by smashing a picture in the house, allowing all three brothers to flee into the forest. After killing Sathyan, they hitch a ride from a passing lorry driven by a fellow Tamilian, Gabriel, who is transporting coffins. On the back of the lorry, the three brothers toast their success, with Chikku planning to buy a biryani to celebrate. One of the coffins opens, and Gabriel's son Andrew, who had been sleeping in it, sits up. In shock, Ila and Periya fall off the lorry to their eventual deaths.

When the police reach the scene they take Gabriel, Andrew and Chikku into custody. Rather than taking them to the police station, the police (who are both on the payroll of and terrified of Johan), head toward's Johan's house, Johan having discovered his father's body. Gabriel, Andrew and Chikku flee into the dense forest, which is too impenetrable for the police to find them. What follows is a cat and mouse game as the police, together with Johan and his henchmen, surround the forest to prevent their escape. Johan, who wants to burn down the forest to smoke them out, expresses frustration that Chikku is too much of a weakling to provide a satisfactorily challenging prey.

Andrew seemingly manages to escape the forest, but is soon caught and returned to Johan, who burns him alive while forcing Gabriel, who had come to give himself up, to watch. Chikku, cowering in fear, is taunted by Johan who shouts into the forest that there is no escape. Realising he has no option but to fight back, Chikku leaves the forest, managing to kill two of Johan's henchmen before confronting Johan himself. Seemingly pleased with Chikku's new-found courage, Johan laughs and offers to tell him a joke. Before he can do so he is run over and killed by a lorry (driven by Vijay Sethupathi in a cameo appearance). The driver briefly laments that this is the 36th time he has hit someone, before shrugging it off and offering Chikku a lift. The film ends with Chikku in Pondicherry, ordering a biriyani in a local restaurant, as the narrator hopes that he will be able to return to living a simple life.

Cast

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Aside from the narrator Vijay Sethupathi and Vijay Ram, who starred in Thiagarajan Kumararaja's Super Deluxe (2019), the entire cast are newcomers to film, coming from a theatre background.[2]

  • Vasanth Selvam as Periya Pandi, the eldest son[5]
  • Dinesh Mani as Ila Pandi, the second son[5]
  • Vijay Ram as Chikku Pandi, the youngest son[5]
  • Vishaal Ram as Sathyan, the Kerala rubber estate owner[5]
  • Hakkim Shahjahan as Johan Kariya aka Panni Kusu Roast, Sathyan's psychopathic son[5]
  • Rishab as Gabriel, a Tamilian lorry driver
  • Augustine R Kevin as Andrew, Gabriel's son
  • Vijay Sethupathi as a lorry driver (cameo)[7]

Soundtrack

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The original background score of the film was composed by Vinoth Thanigasalam and the songs are composed by Neil Sebastian and Judah Paul. The songs album featured seven tracks with lyrics written by Umadevi, Suhail Koya, Tenzin Rangdol, Payal John and Solar Sai.[citation needed]

Track listing
No.TitleLyricsMusicSinger(s)Length
1."Aarariro"UmadeviJudah PaulSuraj Jagan5:07
2."Aarariro" (Acoustic)UmadeviJudah PaulAlphons Joseph4:04
3."Lovely" (Malayalam)Suhail KoyaNeil Sebastian, Immanuel RobertsJassie Gift3:04
4."Manjaadi" (Malayalam)Suhail KoyaNeil SebastianArun Ghosh3:31
5."Baby" (English)Tenzin RandolNeil Sebastian, Immanuel RobertsTenzin Randol3:00
6."Giorno Di Pioggia"Payal JohnNeil SebastianPayal John2:38
7."Kadavuley"Uma Devi, Solar SaiNeil SebastianSolar Sai3:39
8."Kadaseela Biriyani Theme" Judah Paul 1:35
9."The Plan" Vinoth Thanigasalam 2:51
10."The Pandis" Vinoth Thanigasalam 2:39
11."The Chase" Vinoth Thanigasalam 2:26
12."Saithan's God" Vinoth Thanigasalam 2:54
13."The Sac goes away" Vinoth Thanigasalam 3:34
14."The Animal and the wall" Vinoth Thanigasalam, Neil Sebastian 4:27

Reception

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Srivatsan S. of The Hindu stated that, "even though the film won't give you a wholesome feeling, the commitment from a debutant filmmaker is visible and I’m willing to give all my money".[1] Haricharan Pudipeddi of Hindustan Times wrote that "the film is one of the most bizarre films to come out of Tamil cinema in recent years, unabashedly raw indie film and is largely brilliant and naive in parts". He also added that, the film manages to stay largely engaging and is worth being called one of the best films of the year.[8] Behindwoods rated the film with 3/5 stars, stating that "the film does have its share of flaws but they're minuscule in nature, as the general audience might have engagement issues with the film, but once you cross that barrier, there's a Biriyani feast awaiting you from Nishanth and team".[9]

Navein Darshan of The New Indian Express praised the director, saying that "the film is dark, yet hilarious, despite being filled with newcomers, but pleasantly surprises by delivering a finished product, signaling the arrival of a daring filmmaker".[3] Sify called the film an amusing thriller as it deserves a watch for its unique presentation, style, and original plot.[4] Dinamalar rated the film with 2.5/5 stars, stating that, "even though the film tests our patience in the first half, it turns into an engrossing product in the second half with several scenes deserving applause".[10] M Suganth of The Times of India rated the film with 3.5/5 stating that, "the thriller film is full of cinematic vigour and keeps us hooked from start to finish and unfolds like a dark comic experience, filled with colourful characters". He concluded that "the filmmaker announces his arrival loud and clear and we can't wait to see where he goes from here".[5]

The well received and critically celebrated areas are its luscious cinematography along with its intensely unique sound design and its bizarre background score or music.

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Srivatsan, S (19 November 2021). "'Kadaseela Biriyani' movie review: A first-rate cinema experience. You wish it had a little more pulp". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 23 November 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b Darshan, Navein (24 November 2021). "Baahubali showed more violence than we did: Kadaseela Biriyani director Nishanth Kalidindi". The New Indian Express. Archived from the original on 13 December 2021. Retrieved 13 December 2021.
  3. ^ a b Darshan, Navein (19 November 2021). "'Kadaseela Biriyani' Review: A dark, yet hilarious film". The New Indian Express. Archived from the original on 25 November 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2021.
  4. ^ a b "Kadaseela Biriyani review: An amusing thriller". Sify. 19 November 2021. Archived from the original on 20 November 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Suganth, M (19 November 2021). "Movie Reviews – Tamil – Kadaseela Biriyani". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 24 November 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2021.
  6. ^ "The intriguing trailer of Kadaseela Biriyani is here!". Cinema Express. 3 November 2021. Archived from the original on 25 November 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2021.
  7. ^ Bobby Sing. "Kadaseela Biriyani review: Vasanth Selvam, Hakkim Shah, Dinesh Mani and Vijay Ram are spectacular in this gory but very well made revenge thriller". The Free Press Journal. Archived from the original on 13 February 2022. Retrieved 20 September 2023.
  8. ^ Pudipeddi, Haricharan (19 November 2021). "Kadaseela Biriyani movie review: Brilliantly shot, bizarre indie thriller with a heart". Hindustan Times. Archived from the original on 24 November 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2021.
  9. ^ "'Kadaseela Biriyani' movie review". Behindwoods. 19 November 2021. Archived from the original on 25 November 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2021.
  10. ^ "கடைசீல பிரியாணி - விமர்சனம்" [Kadaseela Biriyani – Review]. Dinamalar (in Tamil). 19 November 2021. Archived from the original on 25 November 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2021.
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