Vinay Fort and Soubin Shahir turn out to be rock stars! I stayed put till the end credits came up to find out who that amazing actor who played Girirajan Kozhi in the film was, and it turns out be Sharafudeen. There has to be a mention of the supporting cast here as well, be it Krishna Shankar, Shabareesh Verma or Siju Wilson, who play it up exceptionally well to the galleries. Madonna Sebastian with her curious Bambi-esque eyes and agreeable smile breezes in while Anupama Parameshwaran retains the youthful charm that is required of Mary to the hilt. She lights up the screen with her fabulous screen presence, and with the most precise of expressions underlines that she is here to stay.
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The three girls are equally extraordinary, but it's Sai Pallavi who wins the show hands down, with a bravura feat as the guest lecturer Malar who wins over George's heart. As he breaks down and walks away from the real love of his life, he manages to throw an entire cinema hall into silence with his tears, as much as he had driven them into irrepressible fits of mirth not much earlier. Nivin Pauly as George is tremendously remarkable, and comes up with one of his best performances till date. The casting director of the film merits a bow, for there is not one actor in it who looks out of place. 'Premam' spellbinds you with some real awesome performances from a group of young actors who seem to have thrown caution to the winds and who have gone at their respective roles - long or short - with a vengeance. It's no shocker then that his joys become ours as much as his grief does his exultation and desolation are all ours to share as well.
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'Premam' adopts a juicily unmarked conversational tone for the most part, and the audience draws in a few chairs and sits along with George and his pals as they plan and replan his life. Of the several scenes that are really hilarious, one belongs to Vimal and his lecture on Java, and his side-splitting explanation as to how simple Java truly is. There is also the young lecturer Vimal (Vinay Fort) who develops an instant attraction towards Malar, and the Physical Education lecturer (Soubin Shahir) who offers him all support in his romantic adventure. Hostility or what seemed like it once darts away leaving a few embarrassed souls in its wake. Years later, when pettiness has given way to mellowness, Justin rings up George to invite him over to his bachelor's party.
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There are other seemingly smaller characters who occupy the outskirts of this portrait, like Justin (Justin) and his gang - the rival group at college - whom George and his team often rub shoulders against. It's when these petals had long wilted and withered by, that Celin arrives accentuating once and for all that fresh shoots are bound to spring up after the heavy rains.
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It does take a few years for George to get over the dejection that his first love had brought along with, and when Malar grabs his hand and walks forward life sprouts flowers all around. Bursting with hopefulness and loaded with resilience, 'Premam' is a stunning cinematic piece that talks of the process of falling in love, breaking a heart, nurturing a stinging memory or two for the rest of your life and above all, letting go and moving on.Īnd then there is love itself, and the different shades that the oldest of human emotions brings in its fray. It is this perfumed whiff of reminiscences that the film rakes up with its very first scene that makes 'Premam' one of the best films that I have watched till now this year one that it maintains till the very last scene that comes almost after three hours. They seem to have wholly vanished and are no longer seen fluttering around these alley ways ridden with smoke and dust and have perhaps moved on to greener meadows where the sparkle of an unsullied dew drop awaits. As the title cards of Alphonse Puthren's 'Premam' came up, I couldn't stop thinking of those butterflies - the swallow tails and the cabbage whites, the blue bottles and the bird wings - that once flitted around with fragrant memories of an entire generation's childhood laden on their pretty wings.