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Film Review: ''Penngal''
FILMS HAVE, no doubt, been one of the most powerful tools to
address social evils, be it police atrocities, dowry harassment
or corruption in high places. But more often than not, the
message is lost somewhere because of the quality of the final
product, where the commercial elements interfere too much and the
plot at times, strays from the theme.
Take Adhya Global Visions' ``Penngal'', directed by Raj Marudhu.
The theme - on prostitution - is bold and very relevant today.
The increase in number of cases of child prostitution is
appalling and shocking.
And in this light, a film like ``Penngal'' most definitely makes
one sit up and think. But unfortunately, the film fails to draw
the involvement of the audience.
Mangalapuram is a little village nestling in a valley cut off
from the rest of the world by a mountain range. The breadwinners
are the women who earn money through prostitution.
The village is `ruled' by Valasamma (who is always decked in
bridal finery) and her boss, Rasiyya (the archetypal villain who
drinks and wears loads of gold). Here arrives Kaveri with dreams
of transforming the miserable lives of the women. Her mother and
grandmother too belong to the village, but her mother's bold
initiative to send Kaveri to an orphange saves kaveri from taking
to the `family profession'.
She manages to retrieve some of the lost glory but how long will
it last? One must commend the director (who has also written the
screenplay and dialogues) for taking on such a theme.
He brings to focus every aspect of these women's miserable
existence - the desperation and dejection on the faces when a son
is born, the fear when their young daughter is forcefully
`readied' for the `occasion', the poverty and the diseases and
the ostracism from the rest of the world.
But he could have taken a little more care in crafting it, and
putting it all together.
The acting standards are below average (all unknown faces, except
for Santhana Bharati) and the songs, especially the duet, which
are obviously included for commercial viability, could have been
avoided.
Also, the quality of editing is poor, with too many abrupt jumps.
The film is neither a full-fledged documentary nor a regular
feature.
In the first half, the miseries the women face go on piling up
without any relief, either for them or the viewer.
The second half is didactic and there is no scope for audience
participation.
Films such as ``Penngal'' are required to make us a little more
conscious of the social problems but they should be made with a
little more care and sensitivity.
SAVITHA PADMANABHAN
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