Vikram Vedha Movie Review (2024)

Language: Tamil

Director:Pushkar-Gayatri

Cast: R Madhavan, Vijay Sethupathi, Shraddha Srinath,Varalaxmi Sarathkumar

The latter half of the title of Pushkar-Gayatri's Vikram Vedha belongs to the gangster played by Vijay Sethupathi. Even before we set eyes on him – and it's a while into the movie before he swaggers in – he's something of a legend. Cops speak in awe of the time he leapt from the first floor of a building, knife in hand, and sliced through a man's head. And when news gets around that he has surfaced, it feels like Satan himself has emerged from his underground lair.

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An ordinary masala movie would pit a god against this demon – and indeed, the first half of the title (R Madhavan) does come across like the scourge of evil, a saviour. He's an encounter cop, but he's able to sleep guiltlessly because he's convinced the men he's pumping bullets into are bad men who deserve to die. But slowly, the paint starts peeling away. Rather, the colour of his tees undergo a change. During the first meeting of Vikram and Vedha, the former is in white, the latter in black. By their last meeting, Vikram is in grey. He knows now that it isn't a clear-cut line between good and evil.

The notion that cops and gangsters are but two sides of the same coin isn't new: Michael Mann's Heat is a brilliant exploration of how a cop who thinks he is doing good may be more messed up than the gangster. But Pushkar-Gayatri have decided to tell their story through the prism of the Vikram/Vetaal folklore – hence the title. The film opens with an animated stretch with the king Vikram high up in his castle, and soon, in pursuit of the vampire Vetaal, he plunges deep into a lake, a metaphorical hell. The creature latches onto his back and begins to narrate stories that are the old-world answer to a grey T-shirt: there's a moral conundrum at the end.

This, in short, is the film. In a shot in a jeep, Vedha, who's seated behind Vikram, quite literally appears to be on Vikram's back. And boy, does he tell stories. Structurally speaking, this is a terrific idea. Each of Vedha's stories is used to launch a flashback, and in addition to reshaping Vikram's notions of morality, each of them provides clues to crack the case, find out what Vedha is up to and why.

As characters, I didn't buy a second of Vikram or Vedha. The latter is more a conceit, a wise-beyond-his-years agent of learning. Pushkar-Gayatri have no patience with filmy clichés, so when someone close to Vedha dies, we don't see him weeping in frustration, seething with rage. He's a Zen killer, more Zen than killer. After narrating his first story, he tells Vikram, "Idhu Vedha-va pathi illa, dharmathai pathi." (This is not about Vedha. This is about dharma.) If he got himself a shave and ditched the gun, you'd find him under a Bodhi tree.

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And Vikram transforms into a rapt disciple, holding on to his every word. The writer-directors themselves must have been unconvinced about this, for more than once, a character asks Vikram about his fascination with Vedha. King Vikram was forced to hear Vetaal out because if he didn't, his head would shatter into a thousand pieces. This Vikram's reason simply seems to be "the screenplay told me so."

It's a testament to the leading men that we don't burst out laughing by the time the Vikram-Vedha relationship morphs into something out of a Hollywood buddy-cop movie. Madhavan's is a part he can play in his sleep, but the actor is wide awake – he makes Vikram a co*cky cowboy cop whose eyes are slowly clouded by doubt. And Vijay Sethupathi is fantastic, tossing away crowd-pleasing lines in the most casual fashion. Part of the fun of the film is watching these actors play off each other – in terms of acting styles, in terms of the "class" versus "mass" image, everything.

The women are more real. Vikram's wife Priya (Shraddha Srinath) is a lawyer, and one of her cases introduces a moral dilemma in the household – something that isn't explored as much as I'd have liked. And Varalaxmi Sarathkumar plays Chandra, who loves Vedha's brother Pulli (Kathir). Their single scene together made me smile. He slaps her. She's startled for a second, then she slaps him back. She's no pushover. Chandra is also the most convincingly written character. Something she does when handed a bagful of cash harks back to how, as a child, she was similarly swayed by the prospect of easy money.

For the longest time, we get tired gangster-movie tropes. A loved one who says, "Give up this job. Let's go away and do something else." Or the "you killed one of my people, now I'm killing one of yours." You're two steps ahead. You think a character is going to die; he does. And the attempts at character-building are fleeting, like when Vikram's black-or-white worldview is explained by a line about his father, also a cop, who had no use for shades of grey. The thrills we expect from the genre are absent.

Which leads me to wonder if, beneath the gangster-movie veneer, Vikram Vedha isn't really a neo-noir puzzle, a series of jigsaw pieces that come together only by the end. For I liked the film more when I was thinking back about it than while I was sitting through it. A character is given the Biblical name of Simon, and, like the Simon of the Bible, he has a son named Alexander. He gets a Biblical quote as well, about the "sins of the father" that we slowly realise isn't as throwaway a line as we thought it was.

The actual throwaway lines are a lot of fun. Pushkar-Gayatri's first two films were comedies of some sort, and that playfulness seeps into the snappy dialogue here. Before an encounter, Vikram tells his men, "Boys, odambula ottai vizhaama paathukkunga." (See that you don't end up with holes.) The music, though, takes itself very seriously. CS Sam produces a good album (Nee pogaadheyis just lovely), but his score is deafening, and it drowns out a lot of the dialogue.

And thanks to cinematographer PS Vinod, there isn't one uninteresting frame. As in noir, we get a lot of light and shadow play. When two men talk in the first floor of a building, the camera is just below, at an angle, so the windows above them seem to be fanning out under the sky. Another conversation is staged through the bars of a window, with the wall blacking out an entire half of the frame. A gang war, set on a beach, begins with what looks like a freeze frame – just two sets of enemies, and the sea behind them. At least in this respect, the answer to whether Vikram Vedha is worth watching is a resounding yes.

Vikram Vedha Movie Review (2024)

FAQs

Is Vikram Vedha hit or flop? ›

Vikram Vedha was theatrically released worldwide on 30 September 2022 and received positive reviews from critics and audience, with praise directed towards the direction, cinematography, screenplay, background score and the performances (particularly Khan and Roshan), but underperformed at the box office.

Is the Vikram Vedha movie worth watching? ›

Vikram Vedha is beyond just a faithful remake. The makers deserve a standing ovation for delivering a perfect combination of a meaty mass and a class entertainer. If you have seen the original, this will surprise you with its twists and turns.

What is the conclusion of Vikram Vedha movie? ›

At the end of Vikram Vedha, it was revealed that Vikram's entire team of officers was corrupt. So Vikram shot them all. Vikram Vedha ended on a cliffhanger as the closing frame saw both of them pointing guns at each other.

Why is Vikram Vedha so popular? ›

We've had filmmakers who have tried several forms of storytelling. But re-telling a story with the same effect is perhaps the reason why Vikram Vedha stands out. Pushkar-Gayatri's version of Vikram Vedha is one such smartly-written thriller, which has a texture, well-developed character arcs and filmmaking gimmickry.

Why did Vikram Vedha flopped? ›

Hrithik Roshan recently opened his feelings on Vikram Vedha's failure at box office. He said that the film lacked certain appeal and emotions that his fans adore about him. Hrithik described Vikram Vedha as an 'intellectual picture' and stated, "Vikram Vedha is a film that is cerebral.

Is Vikram Vedha a true story? ›

It is Inspired by the Indian folktale Baital Pachisi, which is known internationally as Vikram-Vetala. The film follows Vikram, a police inspector, who sets out to track down and kill Vedha, a gangster.

Who was better in Vikram Vedha? ›

If comparisons are to be made no matter how odious they may be, Saif Ali Khan makes a far better Vikram. He inhabits the character of the tough cop with conviction and exudes the external toughness that defines the man and his mission.

Why did Vedha save Vikram? ›

Vedha does not kill Vikram because he believes in killing the cause of the problem and he believes that Vikram is just a tool, not the cause. Also, Vedha did not kill Simon, which shows that he does not kill people with a moral conscience. So, he would not kill Vikram.

Is Vikram Vedha remake better than original? ›

The lead stars of this Vikram Vedha have the pizzazz of the duo in the original (though I think Vijay Sethupathi pulled off Vedha's casual coolth even better than Hrithik), the action is as neatly edited as the original, the sense of humour as strategically inserted to lighten the mood in the midst of grave moral ...

What happened to Vedha in Vikram Vedha? ›

Vikram slowly realises that the entire unit had also been paid by Ravi. Surendhar reveals that Ravi paid them to kill Vedha and that Chandra's abduction was intended to get Pulli out of Mumbai, which would lure Vedha out of hiding. The guilt-ridden Simon had gone to save Chandra, but the unit killed both of them.

Is Vikram Vedha different from Vikram Vedha? ›

Vikram vedha is a Tamil movie starring Vijay Sethupathi and Madhavan released back in 2017. One can say it is a modern adaptation of indian folkore of vikram and vedhal(bethal). It is now being remade into bollywood.

What is the plot of Vikram Vedha? ›

What is the budget of Vikram Vedha? ›

How much money did Vikram Vedha make? ›

A:Vikram Vedha collected ₹135.03 cr. at the worldwide box office. In India, it collected ₹78.66 cr. Nett (₹93.64 cr.

Was Tiger 3 hit or flop? ›

The film grossed ₹466.63 crore worldwide, emerging as the sixth highest-grossing Hindi film of 2023 and the ninth highest-grossing Indian film of 2023.

Is the fighter film hit or flop? ›

Despite of a mixed reception, it has grossed ₹211.50 crore (US$26 million) nett in India and ₹337.2 crore (US$42 million) worldwide to rank as the second highest-grossing Indian film of 2024 and highest-grossing Hindi film of 2024.

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