No Rajnikanth fan will grudge an off-season release (guess that's what you call a second film within a year for an actor who usually does one film in three years.) of the star. Thanks to director P Vasu for convincing Rajni that there is enough in his script and treatment to do a whirlwind 40-day shoot. But looking at the finished product, the mind boggles at what could have been.
On the one hand you have a premise that talks about a star and his long lost friend. On the other, you have Rajnikanth, whose real life so starkly mirrors the storyline.
Shouldn't this have been the perfect vehicle that tells us, or rather shows us, what the real Rajnikanth is like? The real Rajnikanth, who not unlike the character Ashok Kumar, has not just one but a handful of friends who supported him during his early struggling days and who the star still holds very dear. The real Rajnikanth, who does not shirk from sporting his grey stubble in public without a worry about that exclusive preserve of celebrity called image. An image, which most other stars spend a lifetime cultivating and then yet another in getting a makeover.
But Rajni is wasted. Agreed, merely his presence might be worth the acceptance money, but then Vasu could have done a lot more. Not even a bit of Rajni's famed off-screen persona shows in the movie. Most of Rajni's screen time is wasted as either a device to cue in songs or displaying bizarre special effects (the shoot is ostensibly that of a sequel to Chandramukhi).
There is also a plug in the script aimed at dispelling criticism about Rajnikanth. There are hard-hitting questions asked about Rajnikanth like his political stand whenever an issue arises between Karnataka and Tamil Nadu. Then there are the flippant, gossipy and personal ones like why the heck does he have to pack off to the Himalayas at the drop of a hat. If at all the makers wanted to dispel criticism, it should have been those of the first kind. And director R Sundarrajan, for whom being loud has worked most of the times, is one decibel too shrill here.
Vadivel leads an army of funny men and justifies his top billing among the comedians. The thing about him is that he does nothing his predecessors have not done. The comedy set-pieces where the joke is always on the comedian are the same. But it is what he does after the customary fall that sets Vadivel apart. And here too, though the comedy sequences are routine, he shines, the standout being the time when he gets to meet the star.
Partly because it retains the flavour of the original script and partly because you are rooting for Pasupathy by then, the climax really works. If at all the movie has drawn you in, and by the time the ending nears, you desperately want Pasupathy to be vindicated.
Kuselan would have been a great watch had the makers used the premise as a tool to explore the phenomenon that makes Rajni the enigma he is. In trying to serve up a 'Rajni film' when the original script had space only for a cameo, the makers have ended up with a film where the star is reduced to merely a walk-on role rehashing his most popular one-liners from recent times. But Rajni being what he is, don't be surprised if nobody complains.
Rediff Rating: