PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
5,5/10
2,2 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Un universitario se enamora de una joven actriz y se casa con ella, pero las cosas se amargan rápido.Un universitario se enamora de una joven actriz y se casa con ella, pero las cosas se amargan rápido.Un universitario se enamora de una joven actriz y se casa con ella, pero las cosas se amargan rápido.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Premios
- 3 premios y 2 nominaciones en total
Senthil Veeraasamy
- Kuberan
- (as Senthil Veerasamy)
Sunaina Yella
- Mythili
- (as Sunaina)
Reseñas destacadas
To be honest the movie has GVM standard script all over it, but i find that too much songs in the first half of the movie taking the momentum away. Second half is much better but then you can see that due to the movies shooting dates issue the movie was ended in a rush. This is average at best. Acting from Megha Akash doesnt seem good and also Sasikumar's presence is wasted with very little time on it.
A one time watch .
The problem is with the lack of proper pattern throughout. We know Gautham Menon has that potential to engage the audience to an outer perspective context but now he just slipped off and brought a dimension-less output. Went for the songs actually but here it did not goes off the mark. Poor visualization of songs and incorrect usage of non-linear pattern are the basic faults that i can feel throughout the movie. Gautham's significant portrayal is the addition of romance in his movie but here he never went up to that expectations. That's why I am done this rating to the movie.
GVM! What have you done! (NO SPOILERS)
ENPT is by far the worst GVM film. I have a few questions:
(i) Was the voiceover completely necessary? There's a scene midway where Raghu (Dhanush) meets Lekha (Megha Akash) four years after their little rendezvous. Raghu in his monotonous voiceover says "Hi, how are you, Lekha? It's been a while." Why couldn't he have just opened his mouth and asked this? Why is the voiceover unnecessarily providing plot dumps.
(ii) Sasikumar? Really? GVM movie characters are known to spit out English phrases and sentences. You wanted to find an actor to play an important but tiny role in the second-half and you went with Sasikumar? Really?
(iii) What was Megha Akash told? Was she told that this was a movie or an ad film shoot? She is more wooden than the Redwood Forest.
(iv) How did Sunaina agree to this? I get that she hasn't had any good roles recently but was she aware of what the role entailed?
(v) What were you thinking, GVM? You've spent an incredible amount of money to make this piece of crap.
Every artist suffers from tedium at some point. Every director has their templates. It's high time Gautham Vasudev Menon brushes aside the after-effects of his earlier films and moves on to something totally fresh. For GVM, it's always been high-on-love-high-on-action storylines; so much that a number of his recent films (including this one) feel like less-than-fulfilling rehashes of his earlier outings. 3.5 years in the making with plenty of sustained hype regarding the collaboration between one of Tamil cinema's most relevant stars (Dhanush) and a director who has always been known for balance styling with substance (well, that used to be the case), ENPT was touted to be a cracker.
However, ENPT is filled with (by-now-generic) GVM tropes that come across as no surprise to viewers: a fully-urban setting, a romance that may sound superficial on paper but somehow translates well onto the screen, voice-overs (one too many in ENPT, I felt), familial vibes that often remind you of your own homes, a gracefully written heroine, a viciously creepy villain who always targets the heroine, crisply shot fight sequences and chartbuster songs. It's all there but packaged slightly differently!
ENPT is more in tune with GVM's Achcham Yenbadhu Madamaiyada which was also a strange blend of action and romance. The non-linearity in the screenplay doesn't work in its full effect here. The frequent jumps in the timeline only contribute to the overall chaos. Yet, it does feel like the first half was a lot more upbeat compared to the second. As in most GVM flicks, the initial half is all about the breezy romance between the lead pair of ENPT: Raghu (a clean-shaven Dhanush), a college student and Lekha (a gorgeous Megha Akash), an upcoming actress. The love-at-first-sight element kicks in as usual, and in no time, they're chilling in each other's arms.
But we are also shown snippets of Raghu being involved in somewhat non-sensical gunfights in between. So, the director, with the help of a gazillion voiceovers, keeps spoonfeeding his viewers, in case they couldn't follow what the hell was going on. Some of them (the voiceovers, I mean) do enhance the storytelling (for example, the scene in the caravan's bathroom) and help connect a few dots especially when dialogues are lacking.
As one would expect from GVM films, the cinematography (Jomon T John and Manoj Paramahamsa) and the music (Darbuka Siva) are top-notch. Dhanush tries his best to salvage what the lazy scripting offers him, and the scene (set in a hospital corridor) where he inquires about the health condition of someone he cares deeply, is particularly remarkable. There's also an intriguing fight sequence that takes place inside an elevator; I wish these elements (including the wonderful compositions by Darbuka Siva) were used in a film boasting a better screenplay, and not something that frequently evokes déjà vu.
However, ENPT is filled with (by-now-generic) GVM tropes that come across as no surprise to viewers: a fully-urban setting, a romance that may sound superficial on paper but somehow translates well onto the screen, voice-overs (one too many in ENPT, I felt), familial vibes that often remind you of your own homes, a gracefully written heroine, a viciously creepy villain who always targets the heroine, crisply shot fight sequences and chartbuster songs. It's all there but packaged slightly differently!
ENPT is more in tune with GVM's Achcham Yenbadhu Madamaiyada which was also a strange blend of action and romance. The non-linearity in the screenplay doesn't work in its full effect here. The frequent jumps in the timeline only contribute to the overall chaos. Yet, it does feel like the first half was a lot more upbeat compared to the second. As in most GVM flicks, the initial half is all about the breezy romance between the lead pair of ENPT: Raghu (a clean-shaven Dhanush), a college student and Lekha (a gorgeous Megha Akash), an upcoming actress. The love-at-first-sight element kicks in as usual, and in no time, they're chilling in each other's arms.
But we are also shown snippets of Raghu being involved in somewhat non-sensical gunfights in between. So, the director, with the help of a gazillion voiceovers, keeps spoonfeeding his viewers, in case they couldn't follow what the hell was going on. Some of them (the voiceovers, I mean) do enhance the storytelling (for example, the scene in the caravan's bathroom) and help connect a few dots especially when dialogues are lacking.
As one would expect from GVM films, the cinematography (Jomon T John and Manoj Paramahamsa) and the music (Darbuka Siva) are top-notch. Dhanush tries his best to salvage what the lazy scripting offers him, and the scene (set in a hospital corridor) where he inquires about the health condition of someone he cares deeply, is particularly remarkable. There's also an intriguing fight sequence that takes place inside an elevator; I wish these elements (including the wonderful compositions by Darbuka Siva) were used in a film boasting a better screenplay, and not something that frequently evokes déjà vu.
Don't know how Menon ditected this movie..slow screen play, tried in Hollywood style. Not upto director previous movies.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesDhanush was initially offered the role of Karthik in Vinnaithaandi Varuvayaa (2010). ENPT marks his first collaboration with director Gautham Menon.
- PifiasAs they stand by a fire at the beach and talk, Raghu tells Lekha, "A girl like you is worth launching a fleet of thousand ships." Moments later, Raghu remarks that the line was prompted by the sea and being reminded of reading 'Cleopatra'. The expression "launched a thousand ships" refers to Helen of Troy. It is from the Christopher Marlowe poem ' The Tragical History of Dr. Faustus': "Was this the face that launch'd a thousand ships / And burnt the topless towers of Ilium?"
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- A Bullet with My Name on It
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 172.647 US$
- Duración2 horas 33 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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