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Ponnlyin Selvan: Part Two

Originaltitel: Ponniyin Selvan: Part Two
  • 2023
  • 16
  • 2 Std. 44 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,2/10
19.324
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Ravi Mohan, Sobhita Dhulipala, and Aishwarya Lekshmi in Ponnlyin Selvan: Part Two (2023)
Trailer [OV] ansehen
trailer wiedergeben3:27
3 Videos
18 Fotos
Abenteuer EpischAktion EpischEpischAbenteuerAktionDrama

Arulmozhi Varman setzt seine Reise fort, um Rajaraja I. zu werden, den größten Herrscher des historischen Chola-Reiches in Südindien.Arulmozhi Varman setzt seine Reise fort, um Rajaraja I. zu werden, den größten Herrscher des historischen Chola-Reiches in Südindien.Arulmozhi Varman setzt seine Reise fort, um Rajaraja I. zu werden, den größten Herrscher des historischen Chola-Reiches in Südindien.

  • Regie
    • Mani Ratnam
    • Sruti Harihara Subramanian
  • Drehbuch
    • Divya Prakash Dubey
    • Jayamohan
    • Kalki Krishnamoorthy
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Vikram
    • Karthi
    • Ravi Mohan
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,2/10
    19.324
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Mani Ratnam
      • Sruti Harihara Subramanian
    • Drehbuch
      • Divya Prakash Dubey
      • Jayamohan
      • Kalki Krishnamoorthy
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Vikram
      • Karthi
      • Ravi Mohan
    • 103Benutzerrezensionen
    • 29Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 16 Gewinne & 15 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos3

    Trailer [OV]
    Trailer 3:27
    Trailer [OV]
    Most Popular Indian Movies of 2023 (So Far)
    Clip 3:12
    Most Popular Indian Movies of 2023 (So Far)
    Most Popular Indian Movies of 2023 (So Far)
    Clip 3:12
    Most Popular Indian Movies of 2023 (So Far)
    The Musical World of PS1 & PS2 Ft. Craig Mann
    Clip 4:52
    The Musical World of PS1 & PS2 Ft. Craig Mann

    Fotos17

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    Topbesetzung54

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    Vikram
    Vikram
    • Aditha Karikalan
    Karthi
    Karthi
    • Vallavaraiyan Vandiyadevan
    Ravi Mohan
    Ravi Mohan
    • Arunmozhi Varman
    • (as Jayam Ravi)
    Aishwarya Rai Bachchan
    Aishwarya Rai Bachchan
    • Oomai Rani…
    Trisha Krishnan
    Trisha Krishnan
    • Kundavai
    Sobhita Dhulipala
    Sobhita Dhulipala
    • Vaanathi
    Aishwarya Lekshmi
    Aishwarya Lekshmi
    • Poonguzhali
    Jayaram
    Jayaram
    • Azhwarkadiyan Nambi
    R. Sarathkumar
    R. Sarathkumar
    • Periya Pazhuvettaraiyar
    • (as Sarath Kumar)
    Parthiban Radhakrishnan
    Parthiban Radhakrishnan
    • Chinna Pazhuvettaraiyar
    Prabhu
    Prabhu
    • Periya Vellar Boothi Vikramakesari
    Prakash Raj
    Prakash Raj
    • Sundara Chozhan
    Rahman
    Rahman
    • Madurantakar
    Kishore Kumar G.
    Kishore Kumar G.
    • Ravi Dasan
    Lal
    Lal
    • Malayamaan
    Nizhalgal Ravi
    Nizhalgal Ravi
    • Sambuvuraiyar
    Nassar
    Nassar
    • Veerapandiyan
    Vikram Prabhu
    Vikram Prabhu
    • Parthibendra Pallavan
    • Regie
      • Mani Ratnam
      • Sruti Harihara Subramanian
    • Drehbuch
      • Divya Prakash Dubey
      • Jayamohan
      • Kalki Krishnamoorthy
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen103

    7,219.3K
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    6Dolchi

    Fixed the fixe-able flaws of part1 - Moving saga of Aditta Karikalan, with boredom notwithstanding

    This movie is a laudable attempt at recreating a thousand year old world - Note this is a "world" and not merely the Tamil nations of the time.. You see Sri Lanka, Andhra, Telengana, Chattisgarh, Rajasthan, Maharastra and even Thailand, perhaps as historically Chola influence was far-flung in a sprawling sphere of influence. Therein lies the problem, the world creation has taken an entire first part 1 to accomplish and the second part merely wraps up the story; albeit with some great moments of cinematic finesse in terms of acting, music, cinematography, costume design and direction.

    We have seen a lot of periodic drama by now.. Whether it be the home-brewn "Baahubali" franchise, or the Western "The Game of Thrones" franchise, fans always went in to see "PS2" with similar expectations. Granted, we know that these two examples were spectacular in part thanks to an illogical world with fantasy science and fictional creatures. Still, movies such as these always showed how thrilling historical fiction could be, and films like "23aam pulikesi" did not even involve fantasy. These movies are completely different from "Ponniyin Selvan", yet manage to make the audience enthralled throughout the screen time and grips one with various techniques from the cinematic craft's handbooks. This is what is missing in the "PS" franchise as a whole - the screenplay was co-written by stage play writers such as Kumaravel and the novel writer Jayamohan.. These two are quite talented and possibly the best at Tamil fiction in their respective media, yet they have neither the training nor the effort to convert the "PS" books into a compelling franchise on the big screen (as many have already noted)...

    The director has spun his magic around this fictional portrayal of the Tamil kings of old.. and shown the characters involved as complicated, realistic beings who one can appreciate up-close. Buoyed by fabulous performances from the cast, Maniratnam has succeeded in his long-time dream of bringing "PS" to the big screen. Yet, being a director predominantly obsessed with romance and characterisations, he has failed to deliver the twists & turns deserving of a mammoth effort.

    Also, the action scenes are unimaginative and lacking of the ancient time's technological prowess.. For instance, the "Seric steel" which was common at this time to make sharp weapons was the inspiration behind the "Valyrian steel" in "The song of ice and fire" book series which in turn was made into the hit TV series "A game of thrones". Yet, why do we not have a passing mention of this in this movie franchise?! You need to have this attention to detail when you have to back up such Herculean efforts by the leading cast of this movie. Also, the time had many Muslim shipwrights advance the navy of Cholas, we do not see even a little of this.. We at least see the Chinese in form of physicians, who were behind the silk and fire arrows of the fabled Chola gunboats. We do not see the Arabian horses which were the reason why Chola cavalry won against North India so effortlessly multiple times, being more well suited for fast raids and horse archery. At least, we see the elephants which were five times in number in the Chola army, when compared to the Gangetic plain empires, thanks to differing geographic conditions. Also, having a Tiger head in the ships just like Dragon heads in the Viking ships of this age - is a nice imaginative touch. Yet, at times reality is mightier than fiction like the Seric steel which was rumoured to hold its edge even after hitting granite and cut medieval everything from silk to the European broadswords in half during the crusades.

    The genius of the director is to maintain Aditta till the very end. In fact, few had expected Aditta (played by Vikram) Karikalan's character to be in the second half. Yet, he holds sway till half an hour before the movie ends. Also, the first ten minutes of this final thirty minutes is about others discussing him and the next fifteen minutes of battle is for him, followed by a five minute summary of Rajaraja's accomplishments. A few ancient kings & generals later fasted as pious scholars, after PTSD. This was depicted as fiction, although it is not shown that Chola Brahmins were Aditta's assasins in reality. Still, the level of detail in the filming production is impeccable. You see amazing costume design which mirror Cholas of the time, while appealing to a nation's current sensibilities. Also, every frame is like a painting as most backdrops are brilliant if indoors thanks to the set-work/VFX, and beautiful if outdoors.. This level of detail to tell a story which winds its way around the Chola empire would have been better. The twists and turns are told in a way which invites yawns. You do not see the audience rooting for any character, as we are not allowed the time to let any individual's heart or nerve points sink in to our thoughts. For instance, Vikram Prabhu's character has been dealt with neatly according to the book. Yet, not allowing a rushed script around his actions would have been better - he looks like a comedy film's heroine rebounding like in Kalakalappu2. Also, we do not see the tone remaining consistent throughout the film, bewildering us further.

    Every frame Vikram comes in the film is deserving of an applause. Be it the first few scenes of battle ready pitching, or the later scenes of roaring dialogues from atop a horse (as if he was born to be a king, and has lived forever atop a horse), or the later heated discussions; he has given the word "method acting" a new definition. All actors have done their parts exceedingly well, from Jayaram (some comic relief, at last!) to Karthi, Jayam Ravi (subtle smile from atop that elephant - wow), Parthiban (owned the fort, shined in the few scenes like a true General), Prabhu (thundered in his siege), Sarath (his emotional scenes made him the hero of the scenes), Lal (fitting tribute to who could have been Uttamasili's peer), Rahman (just splendid as the sage-like prince, stylish finesse notwithstanding), Trisha (Kundavai, the powerhouse), Prakashraj (nothing less than magnificent throughout), Aishwaraya Rai (A revelation in the Kadambur scenes). I do not have much complaints of what has been changed from the books; the team has told a wonderful fictional story, albeit in a bland and soul-less way. We do not want fantastical action where palm trees are turned to catapults for humans like in Baahubali, yet we at least want some creative and engaging action where we enjoy what we see. Yet, we witness just regular action from any masala movie - which assistant director was responsible for these, I wonder..

    The final action scene was marvellous for some, and laborious for some to sit through. Either way, the amount spent on this seemed to have paid dividends, as some loved this. The CGI was good, although some scenes had goofy VFX in the movie as a whole.. I have a few gripes about the climax though... Jayam Ravi did look incredibly upset about a loss in the scene before the battle. Yes, I agree that the happiness at gaining back some lost comrades/family & territory would be gratifying. Yet, I do not understand how the whole kingdom could move on so quickly, onto a gleeful coronation ceremony. At least, a few moments of reflection about the loss would have been worth displaying for the believability factor.

    The opening of the film gives a more in-depth background to the whole romance in question of the film, replete with "Thalapathy" vibes. The river islet scene with Karthi (Vanthiyathevan) blindfolded and Trisha (Kundavai) is very popular in social media, deservingly so and yet laughable at times. The intensity of Kishore (Ravidasan) seems to have been misused in this part, making his character less impactful. The immense potential in these Pandyan rebel actors has been wasted. After showing Ravidasan's gang as pointless before the Chola princes, the main villains seems to be Nandhini and an antihero like Aditta Karikalan himself - thereby irking many Tamil fundamentalists online. Yet, the main fault of both films is not making, fighting these Pandyans a problem for the Chola princes. The unexpected Jayam Ravi (Arunmozhi/Rajaraja) fight to fend off Soman (Nawaz Khan) and gang is amazing for many viewers, yet is not choreographed beautifully enough to lend any justice to the villains. Strong villains add challenges to heroes in a movie, yet the palpable lack of tension whenever behemoths like Soman/Ravidasan enter the scene is ridiculous to say the least. Arunmozhi is shown to have difficulty in fighting the Rastrakuta king, so the ease with which he dispatched the Pandyan rebels is ridiculous (starting from the first part). Although, this inconsistency is nothing compared to other loopholes, this is glaring as we needed some tension at least, to have a film which does not lay bare the events without any suspense.

    Poonguzhazhi and Senthan Amudhan are wasted, yet this is okay. Mandhakini being a strong rockclimbing deep-sea diver is reasonable, although some who have never met such people balk at this idea.. Some staging around these characters could have been done with a lot more creativity. Yet, we have some slow moving, repetitive scenes. The main fault, as I emphasise again, is that the film is boredom inducing, although several faults from the first part were fixed. The scenes are beautiful, of a love saga from a thousand years ago, yet this could have been told in a way more interesting manner. Watch this if you are waiting for a fitting and better end to the first part. This could also work if you are into visual spectacles, AR Rahman's wonderful music, amazing drama, Maniratnam's romance and/or masterful acting.

    PS: The standout scene of PS emerging from a Buddhist vihara before the intermission, was spectacular. However, silly action sequences & the goofy speech with an elephant were off-putting to many. Vikram-Aish face-off scene was fabulous.
    6sriramthestranger

    Good content badly made!!

    The movie has lot of emotional moments but none gets you high and low in the scheme of things. The movie runs and runs without any emotion to connect with. It seems the makers have focused more on the visual elements losing out on the basic stuffs.

    The initial flashback is actually parts of a story rather than a narration, and it only gets uplifted purely from Vikram and Aishwarya Rai performance in the later half. The plot reveals are great and stunning, but it is not impactful - it just happens in the scene without any significance.

    The climax fight sequence and last act lacks punch and could have been made better!!
    8cinephile-007

    Should have been a trilogy

    Adapting a book to screenplay is never a easy task, especially if the book spans across multiple parts. The movie should never lose its core value and at the same time keep its viewers entertained.

    Maniratnam has done his best to achieve both but at some times we are left wondered if he should have made it a trilogy rather than a duology. At times it felt like there was a lot happening that could have been expanded into a 3rd movie.

    The moment you walk out of PS 2,you have mixed feelings about it. It runs for 2.45hrs and yet the plot feels rushed at times.

    Jayaram Ravi was the show stealer in this one while Trisha had pretty much nothing to do except the beautiful Aga naga sequence with Karthi.

    The final battle had no impact on the movie.

    Overall PS2 is a worthy sequel to its predecessor.
    7vijay_raguman

    Recognized as The First Indian Film Released In 4DX Cinematic Format by The Malaysia Book Of Records

    History has been made! 💪🏻 We are honoured & grateful that Malaysia Book Of Records recognizes 'Ponniyin Selvan Part 2 - PS2' as First Indian Language Film Released in 4DX Cinematic Format 🎉🎉🎉🔥🔥🔥

    Immensely grateful to Lyca Productions Pvt Ltd and it's Chairman Mr Subaskaran Allirajah, Mr Tamil Kumaran and Maniratnam Sir for the wonderful opportunity given to MSK Cinemas SDN BHD to release one of the most prestigious film in Indian Cinema 'Ponniyin Selvan 2'. Heartfelt gratitude to the entire Lyca's Senior authorities and team. @lyca_productions

    Sincere appreciation to @gscinemas for their significant support in receiving this recognition. Thank you to @malaysiabookofrecords for the great honour. Deeply grateful to all media friends, family & everyone who make this recognition is possible. Love you all @mskalai_msk & @saradha_sivalingam_kalai (MSK Cinemas Sdn Bhd)
    8amar_deshmukh

    Better than first one.

    Finally, the dream of director "Mani Ratnam" become a reality with release of part 2.

    Part 1 was exactly what I thought, a setup for more drama and twisted political games.

    What I anticipated for Part 1 is a setup for greater drama and deranged political games and that is exactly what I got.

    Better action scenes, cinematography, beautiful lighting, lavish scenery, expansive art direction, authentic costumes and an engaging story are all there in Part 2. I had my doubts about how the director would manage to fit in so much of the tale in this one, but he managed it almost flawlessly, except for the final war sequence, which felt clumsy and averagely staged otherwise it could have been a fantastic conclusion. In the war sequence, camera was too shaky, And I forgot where the warriors were in the field.

    A brief backstory of "Aditya" and "Nandini" is given at the start. It helps us to understand the reasoning behind Nadini's action, And Aditya's behaviour.

    Reasons why minister trying to coronate "Madhurantkan" as next king, What's "Nandini's connection to "Pandays".

    We get to see how different religion and belief were coexisted that time. Whether its "Shaivism", "Vaishnavism" or "Buddhism".

    We learn the minister's motivations for wanting to appoint "Madhurantkan" as the new monarch as the plot develops. How each person's loyalty is motivated differently. Some people are driven by friendship, while others are driven by vengeance and pride.

    The meeting sequence between "Aditya" and "Nandini" is handled masterfully, and both "Vikaram" and "Aishwarya" gave flawless performances. Their emotional state is shown with circular camera movement, while keeping its focus on their expressions. "Aditya" keeps a smile on his face while carrying guilt in his heart and desire for vengeance of "Nandini" fading away is beautifully done. Fire burning in the back and "Nandini" realises her mistake, and scene end with voice of helplessness, Just beautiful.

    Due to Mani Ratnam's cautious direction and AR Rahman's soundtrack, the drama in the film avoids becoming overly dramatic.

    When compared to the first part, music whether it be BGM or songs is an improvement.

    A beautiful, intimate, and sensuous encounter occurs when "Kundavai" and the blinded "Vallavaraiyan" they meet without being sexually or verbally explicit.

    I enjoyed "Jayam Ravi" who played "Arunmozhi" in that role, but the director's decision to have him fight against Pandya assassins in slow motion appeared artificial in the environment, which was depicted as being rustier and rawer.

    I would suggest a recap of first part to enjoy part 2 more, And watch it on big screen.

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    • Wissenswertes
      Parthibendra Pallavan's character has a unique armor in this film - made of scaled leather, shiny and much like a snake's scaly skin. Perhaps, this is an indication of the Pallavas' mythical link to the "Nagas" in history.
    • Patzer
      Aditta Karikala went to warfare at the age of twelve, and the child artist who depicts him looked much older while depicting this.
    • Zitate

      Parthibendra Pallavan: Aditta, you are the future of the Chozha kingdom. To protect that future, Nandini Devi invited you to Kadambur

      Aditha Karikalan: To Kadambur? To the place of conspiracy? Are you the messenger for this? Has that plotter captured you too? Have you fallen into her magic net?

      Parthibendra Pallavan: Aditha! I am your lifelong friend. I have entered the battlefields for you. If needed, I'll enter again... For my friend's future, for the future of Chozha kingdom, you need to come with me

      Aditha Karikalan: Parthiba... What did she say? Tell me exactly

      Parthibendra Pallavan: That you would come if she was the one who invited

    • Soundtracks
      Aga Naga
      Song Composed, Produced and Arranged by A.R. Rahman

      Singer: Shakthisree Gopalan

      Lyrics: Ilango Krishnan

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 28. April 2023 (Indien)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Indien
    • Offizieller Standort
      • Watch Ponniyin Selvan: Part II officially on Tentkotta
    • Sprache
      • Tamil
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Ponniyin Selvan: Part Two
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Lyca Productions
      • Madras Talkies
      • Zeal Z Entertainment services
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

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    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 3.813.000 $
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 5.035.633 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      2 Stunden 44 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • IMAX 6-Track
      • Dolby Digital
      • Dolby Surround 7.1
      • Dolby Atmos
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.39 : 1

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