I cannot remember the last time a Tamil film protagonist had North Indian lineage. Sam Anton's fourth directorial, Gurkha,
tells us that Bahadur Babu (Yogi Babu) is from the bloodline of the
Gorkhas. In true Sam Anton style, his ancestry is explained in a
sentence when a character calls Bahadur a "North Indiavum North Madrasum
sernthu senja kalavaram."
Said to have been inspired from the director's own life, Bahadur's introduction scene as a Gorkha, dancing merrily to Ek Do Teen along with his cousins, is followed by him nabbing a few wrongdoers in his style. This style of humour, which Yogi Babu seems to have made his own, is undoubtedly the biggest asset of Gurkha. While his previous films, including his latest as the lead, Dharma Prabhu, relied predominantly on one-liners, Gurkha also relies on situational comedy.
Said to have been inspired from the director's own life, Bahadur's introduction scene as a Gorkha, dancing merrily to Ek Do Teen along with his cousins, is followed by him nabbing a few wrongdoers in his style. This style of humour, which Yogi Babu seems to have made his own, is undoubtedly the biggest asset of Gurkha. While his previous films, including his latest as the lead, Dharma Prabhu, relied predominantly on one-liners, Gurkha also relies on situational comedy.
Director: Sam Anton
Cast: Yogi Babu, Raj Bharath, Charlee, Elyssa Erhardt, Ravi Mariya
Before failing a police selection test, Bahadur, who even quotes the director's own 100 as
an inspiration, helps his grandmother atop a stool, so he can touch her
legs and seek blessings. You see, he can't bend as he has just had a
heavy meal. At the test, Bahadur, instead of jumping over the hurdles,
picks them up and gives it to a baffled inspector, Haris Jayaraj (Ravi
Mariya), because he believes it to be a genuine hazard for the runners.
His concern also extends to gymnasts, as he is worried their intestines
might fall out. When asked to do push-ups, he lies down and moves his
hands up and down as he thinks it to be easier. Such efficient comedy by
Yogi Babu is the result at the hands of a competent director.
Bahadur ends up getting a dog named
Undertaker instead of an offer letter and joins a security service after
its proprietor (Manobala) gets impressed with his 'skills', when he
lifts a bubble-top water can. Shortly, he gets transferred to a mall,
which gets taken over by a gang of terrorists. The director mentioned in
an interview with us that this film is inspired by Paul Blart: Mall Cop, and Die Hard. While the happenings inside the mall bear similarity to the Bruce Willis-starrer, the iconic Segway from Paul Blart is given a homage of sorts when Bahadur uses a portable scooter in the climax.
The film has a lot of nifty touches that make us laugh. In the office of the Chief Minister, a photo of Bijili Ramesh is captioned as the former CM. The My Vellakaari song starts with the words, 'Indha paadalai padiyavar ungal GV Prakash Kumar'. References to other films are also very many — right from Mersal and Vivegam, to even Suryavamsam and Sagaptham. Much like how Sam Anton played with the 'ennama neenga ippadi panreengalema' line in his first film, Darling, he uses many repetitive references to current affairs in Gurkha. There are the done-to-death Thermocol and god-man jokes too, but there's also a scene involving a politician knocking off a mobile phone.
The film has a lot of nifty touches that make us laugh. In the office of the Chief Minister, a photo of Bijili Ramesh is captioned as the former CM. The My Vellakaari song starts with the words, 'Indha paadalai padiyavar ungal GV Prakash Kumar'. References to other films are also very many — right from Mersal and Vivegam, to even Suryavamsam and Sagaptham. Much like how Sam Anton played with the 'ennama neenga ippadi panreengalema' line in his first film, Darling, he uses many repetitive references to current affairs in Gurkha. There are the done-to-death Thermocol and god-man jokes too, but there's also a scene involving a politician knocking off a mobile phone.
The film is full of funny lines, with able use of wordplay. In a scene where a cop tells Harris to abort a mission, he asks, "Yethuku saar mission-ah abortion panreenga?"
Even the usual trope of an actor's inability to speak English is
efficiently used here for humour: Bahadur calls his love interest,
Margaret (Elyssa Erhardt), Market, and when he likes her a bit too much,
he calls her Supermarket.
The serious sequences involving the terrorist gang's actions are a dampener though, with the stakes never being too high. Actors like Mayilsamy and Charle are also underutilised. Racist slurs are passed off casually. When responsible filmmaking is the need of the hour, such scenes cannot be brushed under the carpet as mere jokes.
These flaws don't kill this film though, whose comedy largely works. This Gurkha and his bag of jokes, save the day.
The serious sequences involving the terrorist gang's actions are a dampener though, with the stakes never being too high. Actors like Mayilsamy and Charle are also underutilised. Racist slurs are passed off casually. When responsible filmmaking is the need of the hour, such scenes cannot be brushed under the carpet as mere jokes.
These flaws don't kill this film though, whose comedy largely works. This Gurkha and his bag of jokes, save the day.
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