![]() ![]() It can be attributed to the logical flaws pertaining to the secondary characters played by Nazriya Nazim, Vinayakan, and Soubin Shahir. However, post-interval, you begin to sense Trance losing some of the potency established in the first half. So when he decides to work for the aforementioned organisation as their puppet - a puppet who makes a truckload of money - you buy his motivation.Īnwar Rasheed, cinematographer Amal Neerad, editor Praveen Prabhakar, and composers Sushin Shyam-Jackson Vijayan keep us hooked by delivering a film that feels part-dream, part-nightmare. ![]() Being born to a family that lost some of its members to depression, Viju's pain and reluctance to become another victim is very convincing. There is so much about him to make you root for him - his tragic past, to begin with. He is capable of redemption, regardless of the quagmire he gets into. Viju is not a character that Fahadh has done before, but you can see minute traces of some of his earlier roles here and there. They have the off-screen and on-screen audience in their grip. ![]() Viju, now rechristened Pastor Joshua Carlton (because Jesus Christ has the same initials), carries the same manic energy as other flawed motivational speakers such as the ones played by Tom Cruise in Magnolia, Paul Dano in There Will Be Blood, or Burt Lancaster in Elmer Gantry. One can sense in the film so much anger towards godmen/false prophets, which comes out through the electrifying performance of its leading man. ![]()
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