Yagavarayinum Naa Kaakka

Yagavarayinum Naa Kaakka / Malupu

Promotional Poster
Directed by Sathya Prabhas Pinishetty
Produced by Ravi Raja Pinisetty
Written by S.Kumareshan(Dialogue)
Screenplay by Sathya Prabhas Pinisetty
Story by Sathya Prabhas Pinisetty
Starring Aadhi
Nikki Galrani
Richa Pallod
Mithun Chakraborty
Nassar
Pasupathy
Music by Prasan Praveen Shyam
Cinematography Shanmugasundaram
Edited by V J Sabu Joseph
Production
company
Adharsha Chitralaya
Distributed by Global United Media
Release dates
  • 26 June 2015 (2015-06-26)[1]
Running time
156 minutes (Tamil)
118 minutes (Telugu)[2]
Country India
Language Tamil
Telugu

Yagavarayinum Naa Kaakka / Malupu is a 2015 Indian Tamil-Telugu bilingual coming-of-age mystery film written and directed by Sathya Prabhas Pinisetty starring his brother Aadhi, Richa Pallod, Nikki Galrani.[3] Pasupathy and Mithun Chakraborty, in his first appearance in a South Indian film, play supporting roles.[4] Yagavarayinum Naa Kaakka is based on a real incident happened in Chennai and tells the story of a happy go lucky man and the shocking incident that turns his life upside down and his search for Mumbai based underworld don Mudaliar. Malupu, the Telugu version of the film was released on February 19, 2016, under titled as Malupu.

Plot

31 December 2014

A young woman tries to call the emergency hotline to save her before she is murdered in a flat in Chennai. Someone is shown covering up the crime.

Present day

Saga (Aadhi), a regular, middle-class college student from Chennai arrives in Mumbai to meet Mudaliar, the city's underworld don and protector of the poor. At around the same time, Mudaliar is rushed to the hospital after he is almost killed in an assassination attempt. A mob assembles before his house and demands he show up to prove he is alive. When he finally does appear, the crowd is grateful for his survival and pray for his well-being.

Four months ago

Saga and his three wealthy friends purposely skip their finals so that they can continue to stay in college and enjoy themselves rather than face adulthood. Despite being warned by his parents to stay away from his friends as they are a bad influence on him, Saga hangs out with them. He finally decides to turn over a new leaf after Kayal (Nikki Galrani), the girl he falls in love with, convinces his father that Saga can be a responsible adult if given the chance. His parents then put him in charge of his sister's wedding arrangements before leaving for their hometown to meet relatives.

31 December 2014

With his family out of town, Saga follows his three friends for a night in the city to celebrate New Year's Eve. At a restaurant, two of his friends are drunk and get into a fight with a girl named Priya and her boyfriend, Surya. When the police come to resolve the ruckus, they realise that Saga's third friend is the son of the police commissioner and decides to arrest Surya instead. Priya protests and is publicly humiliated by the police inspector, without knowing who she is. She then warns Saga and his friends to go into hiding as they will not live to see the light of day.

1 January 2015

By midnight, Saga and his friends come to know that Priya is actually the daughter of Mudaliar. Her brother, Guna, who runs Mudaliar's businesses in Chennai is after them for revenge. Saga's friends try to convince him to follow them into hiding as arranged by their wealthy and influential fathers, but he insists on staying to arrange for his sister's wedding. Later that morning, Saga is chased down by Guna's men while in town. He is finally saved by Deva, Guna's henchman who realises that Saga saved his brother's life once. Deva advises Saga to go to Mumbai to meet Mudaliar in person and explain everything since he is a sensible man, unlike Guna.

Present day

Saga goes to Mudaliar's home and claims that Guna sent him. When it is discovered he is lying, he is tortured since he is suspected for the assassination attempt on Mudaliar. Saga finally gets to meet Mudaliar and explains the truth of what happened that night in Chennai. However, Mudaliar drops a bombshell by saying that after Priya bailed out Surya from the police station that night, both of them went missing and have not been seen since. Since Saga and his friends were the last to see the couple alive, they are the prime suspects. Saga refuses to reveal his friends' whereabouts until Mudaliar threatens to have his family killed. Mudaliar then gives Saga some time to find his friends or else his family will die.

With Kayal and Deva's help, Saga finds out where his friends are hiding. In between, Saga is being attacked by a person in a purdah. As Saga cannot see his face, he is unable to catch his attacker. Saga goes into hiding as he suspects that he is being targeted by the father of one of his friends, in order to keep their identities safe. The attacker then tries to kill Deva and runs away. In the process, he begins to suspect that their fathers are trying to frame him for Priya's disappearance to save their sons. This forces Saga to reveal his friends' hideouts to Mudaliar, who releases his family. Saga then visits Deva in the hospital who is receiving treatment. Deva hands Saga a paper that has a symbol and says the attacker had this symbol tattooed in his hand. After much thinking, Saga realises that he saw such a tattoo on Surya's forearm and he might know about Priya's whereabouts and goes to his flat. Once there, he finds Surya's frozen body being kept by Surya's psychotic ex-girlfriend, Nila who also has the same tattoo on her hand. It is then revealed that she killed both Surya and Priya on New Year's Eve out of jealousy. Before Saga can take Nila to meet Mudaliar, she is killed by Deva's brother, leaving Saga with no alternative to convince the don of the truth. At around the same time, Mudaliar and Guna find Priya's body washed up on the beach.

Once his men have rounded up Saga and his friends, Mudaliar orders Guna and their men to kill them. However, the friend who tried to hit on Priya and caused the whole misunderstanding finally admits his mistake to Mudaliar and pleads for his friends' release in return for his life. Moved by the young man's deed, Mudaliar lets the four friends go as he realises they couldn't have killed his daughter as they were willing to sacrifice their life for their friends.

Cast

Critical response

The Times of India gave the film 2.5 stars out of 5 and wrote, "There are films whose twists in the script make them unpredictable and interesting and there are films that have one twist too many and end up exasperating us. Yaagavarayinum Naa Kaakka belongs in the latter category".[5] The Hindu wrote, "when the film does eventually begin in the second half, there's quite a lot to like...Some subtlety could've been nice towards the end, as there's too much emotion being milked with over-the-top performances and extra-poignant loud music. But that's not really the film’s biggest problem. It is that it doesn't start until you return from the interval break".[6]

Behindwoods rated the film 2.75 out of 5 and felt "it was one movie that’s justified by everything in store to define it with the parliamentary term called commercial cinema, but also creates an impactful experience in the end."They lauded actor Mithun Chakraborty saying "Mithun Da anchored the film on one side with his mightiness".[7] Sify called the film "average" and wrote, "too many songs look unnecessary and the length of the film is a drawback...everything about the film feels rehashed and redundant".[8] Indiaglitz gave the Telugu version of the film, a rating of 3/5 stars, calling it as a one time watch mystery film with gripping screenplay, especially in the second half, appreciating the performances of Richa Pallod, Mithun Chakraborty, Aadhi and Pasupathy. They also lauded the technical crew of the film.[9]

References

  1. "Friday Fury- June 26". www.sify.com. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
  2. "Malupu is a complete package: Aadhi". timesofindia. 19 February 2016. Retrieved 4 March 2016.
  3. Sister act comes to Kollywood. Deccan Chronicle. 2 March 2013. Retrieved 12 March 2013.
  4. Mithun gave nod, floored by Prabhas script. Deccan Chronicle. 1 August 2013. Retrieved 8 August 2013.
  5. "Timesofindia.indiatimes.com is temporarily unavailable". indiatimes.com. Retrieved 2015-08-15.
  6. Sudhir Srinivasan. "Yaagavarayinum Naa Kaakka movie review". The Hindu. Retrieved 2015-08-15.
  7. "Yagavarayinum Naa Kaakka Movie Review". behindwoods. 26 June 2015. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
  8. "Yagavarayinum Naa Kaakka Movie Review". sify. 26 June 2015. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  9. "Malupu Movie Review - A gripping tale". Indiaglitz. 19 February 2016. Retrieved 4 March 2016.
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