<p><em>Valimai</em></p>.<p>Cast: Ajith Kumar, Huma Qureshi, Kartikeya Gummakonda</p>.<p>Rating: 2.5/5 stars</p>.<p>Director H Vinoth's first collaboration with Ajith Kumar was <em>Nerkonda Paarvai</em>, a remake of the acclaimed Hindi social thriller <em>Pink</em>. A big star opting for an unconventional role was a welcome change. Vinoth still succumbed to the expectations from fans and introduced flashback and action sequences in the plot that appeared out of place.</p>.<p>Vinoth, in his latest film, has failed to handle the pressure of directing a superstar film. The film isn't unbearable but considering the three years of '<em>Valimai</em> update' mania, it is underwhelming.</p>.<p>Ajith Kumar plays ACP Arjun, who is out to nab a gang that commits several crimes such as drug-smuggling, chain snatching and murders. The first half, despite the poorly written humour, is watchable. We are intrigued about the gang, which is named 'Satan's Slaves'. The pre-interval block is the film's highlight. It shows a brilliantly choreographed bike stunt scene.</p>.<p>The second half opens with another gripping action sequence. Post that, <em>Valimai</em> goes downhill. The film opts for melodrama over intelligence. The twists are either laughable or non-existent. Apart from the drug menace, Tamil cinema's other pet theme is the 'mother sentiment' and <em>Valimai</em> has ample melodrama.</p>.<p>We miss the director's touch in <em>Valimai</em>. Be it in the script and execution, Vinoth took risks in his first two films: <em>Sathuranga Vettai</em> (2014) and <em>Theeran Adhigaaram Ondru</em> (2017). Here, he plays it too safe and this approach is disappointing compared to what Karthik Subbaraj and Lokesh Kanagaraj did with <em>Petta</em> and <em>Master</em> respectively. Despite their slip-ups, the duo redefined the concept of star vehicles. <em>Valimai</em> has a hero-introduction scene high on creativity but beyond that, it sadly follows the 90s formula. </p>.<p>Ajith is fine while Huma Qureshi has just one slick action scene to shine. The saving grace is the maniacal performance from Kartikeya Gummakonda.</p>
<p><em>Valimai</em></p>.<p>Cast: Ajith Kumar, Huma Qureshi, Kartikeya Gummakonda</p>.<p>Rating: 2.5/5 stars</p>.<p>Director H Vinoth's first collaboration with Ajith Kumar was <em>Nerkonda Paarvai</em>, a remake of the acclaimed Hindi social thriller <em>Pink</em>. A big star opting for an unconventional role was a welcome change. Vinoth still succumbed to the expectations from fans and introduced flashback and action sequences in the plot that appeared out of place.</p>.<p>Vinoth, in his latest film, has failed to handle the pressure of directing a superstar film. The film isn't unbearable but considering the three years of '<em>Valimai</em> update' mania, it is underwhelming.</p>.<p>Ajith Kumar plays ACP Arjun, who is out to nab a gang that commits several crimes such as drug-smuggling, chain snatching and murders. The first half, despite the poorly written humour, is watchable. We are intrigued about the gang, which is named 'Satan's Slaves'. The pre-interval block is the film's highlight. It shows a brilliantly choreographed bike stunt scene.</p>.<p>The second half opens with another gripping action sequence. Post that, <em>Valimai</em> goes downhill. The film opts for melodrama over intelligence. The twists are either laughable or non-existent. Apart from the drug menace, Tamil cinema's other pet theme is the 'mother sentiment' and <em>Valimai</em> has ample melodrama.</p>.<p>We miss the director's touch in <em>Valimai</em>. Be it in the script and execution, Vinoth took risks in his first two films: <em>Sathuranga Vettai</em> (2014) and <em>Theeran Adhigaaram Ondru</em> (2017). Here, he plays it too safe and this approach is disappointing compared to what Karthik Subbaraj and Lokesh Kanagaraj did with <em>Petta</em> and <em>Master</em> respectively. Despite their slip-ups, the duo redefined the concept of star vehicles. <em>Valimai</em> has a hero-introduction scene high on creativity but beyond that, it sadly follows the 90s formula. </p>.<p>Ajith is fine while Huma Qureshi has just one slick action scene to shine. The saving grace is the maniacal performance from Kartikeya Gummakonda.</p>