
Maaman Movie Review: Aishwarya Lekshmi shines bright in this Soori-fronted melodrama that needed fewer detours
In addition, Prasanth packs the film with so many detours that Maaman, unfortunately, is forced to pull back a lot of punches. There are so many characters who just fill up the scenery and have nothing to do. Apart from Rekha, all the other characters are given just one layer to work on. Girija has to oscillate between crying her heart out and breathing fire. But there's this one pivotal scene featuring just her and her mother (Geetha Kailasam), and both of them oscillate from rage, understanding, vulnerability, apologetic, and simply helpless. It is a beautiful scene, and it is a pity that both actors, who continue from where they left off in Lubber Pandhu, don't get enough in the film. The precocious kid Nilan (Prageeth Sivan) doesn't have much to do except be a bundle of annoyance, and he is supremely effective in the role. We feel bad for Nilan because he is a product of poor parenting choices and convenient writing choices. But he is annoying to a fault, and in the larger scheme of things, it is a convincing portrayal, for sure.
After a terrific first half twist, which genuinely touches upon an issue that was neglected throughout the first half, the film loses steam because it tries to do various things. Maaman worked as long as it was just about the primary conflict. However, in an attempt to make an overarching commentary on marriages and masculinity, the film misses out on delivering a more complete film. Even that commentary was more effective when it was delivered through a gag where Bala Saravanan's Poongavanam steals the thunder rather than the drawn-out parallels between Inba-Rekha and Singarayar-Pavunu. Also, Bala Saravanan has the best lines in the film, and he aces it with a lot of panache. In some ways, it is a role we have often seen Soori playing in his days as a comedian, and the reversal of roles is quite a nice nod to the rise of the actor. One can't really fault the performances of the principal cast because it is filled with veterans who understood the assignment, but weren't given enough sheets to fill in.
Make no mistake, Maaman is a film that is based on the idea that Karan Johar popularised at the turn of the millennium, and one that Visu tried to subvert even in the 80s. For every "It's all about loving the family" there was a 'Distance makes the heart grow fonder,' and Maaman tries to do both in the same film, only to end up as a meandering mess despite having the potential to become this generation's Samsaaram Adhu Minsaaram. If only this was a film titled Athai, instead of Maaman. If only.

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