Cast:
Suresh Gopi, Bhavana, Rekha, Sai
Kumar, Murali, Manoj.K.Jayan, Siddique,
Sukumari
Direction: Shaji Kailash
Production: M Ranjith
Chintamani
Kola Case
- A weird case
Lanka, Rashtram and Now Chintamani
Kola Case. It has been a season
of Suresh Gopi's releases. Three
movies, all within one month period,
must be too much even for a die-hard
Suresh Gopi fan.
Chintamani Kola Case is a typical
Suresh Gopi. And coming as it does
after another prototype Rashtram,
it maybe case of too much too soon.
The story of Chintamani Kola Case
is strange (loosely based on a Hollywood
hit of the 80s) and if you are ready
to accept the basic premise of a
lawyer doling out his brand of justice
on criminals whom he himself had
freed from the courts, then you
may like Chintamani Kola Case.
The story is centered on Lal Krishna
Viradiar (Suresh Gopi), the enigmatic
criminal lawyer with an even more
enigmatic mission. Lal Krishna helps
out hardened criminals to get away
from the courts. But later he pursues
and takes them out in a bizarre
show of vigilante justice.
The mighty and venal court him.
Mirchi Girls, a band of spoilt,
rich NRI girls, also approach him.
They are in a soup over the death
of a college-mate Chintamani (Bhavana),
a girl from the other side of the
racks, so to say. She is ragged
and humiliated by the Mirchi girls.
She is believed to have been killed
by the Mirchi girls. Lal Krishna
enters the fray and helps the girls
escape. But does he kill the Mirchi
Girls as he does elsewhere or is
there more to Chintamani Kola Case.
Well, the answers come tumbling
out in a gory, action climax.
It is again a Suresh Gopi film,
much like Rashtram before. Suresh
Gopi, in a grotesque make-up, is
given heavy dialogues and even more
bombastic background whenever he
annihilates evil forces. Suresh
is on known territory.
Bhavana as the poor girl goes through
the routine with ease. Kalabhavan
Mani as the police, a la Sethurama
Iyer of CBI Diary Kurippu, is good.
And is a good relief in an action-packed,
heavy dose film. The rest of cast
(Biju Menon, Sai Kumar, Vani Viswanath,
Rekha) have only walk-in roles.
But they do a decent job of it.
The music, camera and editing work
also pass muster.
Director Shaji Kailas has gone heavy
on the masala elements. If only
he had taken efforts on adding more
credibility to the script, the film
could have been tighter and more
engrossing.