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Dharmadurai
Dharmadurai

Dharmadurai (2016)

76% User Rating
2h 47min
Drama
Action

A doctor turns into an alcoholic, and becomes an embarrassment for his brothers. What caused this descent, and can he redeem himself?

Seenu RamasamyDirector

Cast

View Cast & Crew
Vijay Sethupathi

Vijay Sethupathi

Dr. Dharmadurai

Tamannaah Bhatia

Tamannaah Bhatia

Dr. Subhashini

Srushti Dange

Srushti Dange

Dr. Stella

Aishwarya Rajesh

Aishwarya Rajesh

Anbuselvi

Radikaa Sarathkumar

Radikaa Sarathkumar

Pandiyamma

Aruldoss

Aruldoss

Beemaraasu

M. S. Bhaskar

M. S. Bhaskar

Paraman

Rajesh

Rajesh

Principal Dr. Kamaraj

Soundara Raja

Soundara Raja

Archunan

Ganja Karuppu

Ganja Karuppu

Compounder Gopal

R. K. Suresh

R. K. Suresh

Cameo Appearance in "Makka" song.

Seenu Ramasamy

Seenu Ramasamy

Cameo Appearance as Librarian in "Andipatti" song

Madhuvanti Arun

Madhuvanti Arun

Police Officer

Florent Pereira

Florent Pereira

Saravana Sakthi

Saravana Sakthi

Abi Nakshathra

Abi Nakshathra

Vishalini Daniel

Vishalini Daniel

The Movie Database

Jeeva Subramanian

Reviews (1)

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T
timesofindia
Rating 60%

August 22, 2016

The opening minutes of Dharmadurai bring to mind Seenuramasamy's previous released film Neerparavai (the film that he shot after that, Idam Porul Yeval, is still lying in the cans and even gets referenced here). Like the hero of that film, the protagonist of this one, too, is an alcoholic. The first time we see Dharmadurai (Vijay Sethupathi, solid), he is at a local bar, and the director shows us how his oafish behaviour is a constant source of embarrassment to his brothers (each one named after the Pandavas of the Mahabharata), who even plot to harm him grievously to stop him from maligning them further. His mother, Pandiyammal (Radikaa), is the only one who stands up for him, and we get the sense that there is some reason behind Dharmadurai's alcoholism. But the director holds on to that for quite a while, instead choosing to narrate the college days of Dharma. We see his gang of friends, which includes Stella (Srushti Dange) and Subhashini (Tamannaah, who does a commendable job dubbing for herself), and the two pine for him, the former openly, and the latter in silence. Then, there is their saintly professor Dr Kamaraj (Rajesh), who keeps urging them to treat the profession as a service and work in the villages. And finally, we get the reason for Dharma's need to seek solace in alcohol. We are introduced to Anbuselvi (Aishwarya Rajesh), a worker, whom Dharma falls in love with, and we learn how, despite his do-gooder nature, the romance ends in tragedy because of the greed and regressive attitude of his brothers. Dharmadurai has a great central conflict — how even a person with good intentions can become a liability for someone else because of those around him — but Seenuramasamy's resolution of this conflict feels unsatisfactory. The director takes too long to get into the story, and uses a framing device about a bag of cash that Dharmadurai mistakenly takes along with him when he leaves home, which gets his family into trouble. This adds some tension to the initial scenes, but soon, it is side-lined for the campus scenes, which come across as artificial. And the redemption angle is resolved midway into the second half, and we do not have anything else to care for after that. The director fills the remaining time with a less involving sub-plot centred around Dharma and Subha, and brings in the matter of the money again through developments that do not feel organic. But the film does have genuinely affecting moments, and actors like Aishwarya Rajesh (once again typecast as a poor woman), Radikaa (confident), MS Bhaskar (subtle) and Rajesh (fantastic) enhance the ordinary writing in many of the scenes. The repeated stressing of the need for altruism gets tiring at times, but in these cynical times, it does leave you with a warm feeling. There are quite a few moments (like the entire segment involving Anbuselvi) that convey what this director is capable of, but the synthetic sub-plots pull the film down and prevent it from becoming the emotional roller coaster that it should have been.

Media

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Dharmadurai Official Trailer | Vijay Sethupathi, Tamannaah | Yuvan Shankar Raja | Trend Music

Dharmadurai Official Trailer | Vijay Sethupathi, Tamannaah | Yuvan Shankar Raja | Trend Music

Dharmadurai Teaser | Vijay Sethupathi, Tamannaah | Yuvan Shankar Raja

Dharmadurai Teaser | Vijay Sethupathi, Tamannaah | Yuvan Shankar Raja

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