Two clips from recent promotional interviews went viral for the most ironic reasons. A Telugu producer asserted that there’s no nepotism in their film industry, and closer home, Sundar C, while promoting his movie Gangers, said his films never have double-meaning dialogues or suggestive sequences. Of course, netizens called it out and had a field day on social media. In fact, that is one of a few more concerns that plague Gangers, a rudimentary heist comedy almost rescued by the back-in-form legendary comedian Vadivelu.
Veteran filmmaker Sundar C’s films are known for their simple plots, and Gangers is no different. The film is a mishmash of several ideas and templates we have gotten accustomed to — some from the director’s yesteryear hits. When a schoolgirl goes missing, her teacher, Sujitha (Catherine Tresa), takes it up and gets an undercover cop to serve as a teacher. Meanwhile, Saravanan (Sundar C) lands up in town as the new PET teacher for a school where Singaram (Vadivelu) holds the same position and has an eye for Sujitha. Is Saravanan the appointed cop? What’s the correlation between the teachers and the local gangsters masquerading as bigwigs? What are the films these plot points remind you of?…
The biggest USP of Gangers is the reunion of Sundar C and Vadivelu. Apart from directing the comedy icon in films like Winner, Giri, and Rendu, the director has also shared screenspace with Vadivelu in films like Thalai Nagaram and Nagaram Marupakkam — films that have become synonymous with their humour stretches. Gangers reunites the duo after 14 years, and while the new film does not break any boundaries with its genre, the veterans predominantly deliver! It’s been more than a decade since we saw Vadivelu in an extended comedic role, and Gangers seats him right on top of the throne he once reigned from.
A still from ‘Gangers’
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement
Humour is not just Gangers’ calling card but also its primary asset. Though some fall flat, most of them — especially the ones featuring Vadivelu — work and when they do, they bring the roof down with laughter. In the opening credits, Vadivelu is introduced with an epithet that goes, ‘the Vaigai river that never dries up’ as a play on his Vaigai Puyal sobriquet, and he proves it to be right.
The plot of two men falling for the same woman is a recurring subplot seen in Sundar C’s multiple films; as a serious trope in Ullam Kollai Poguthae and Anbe Sivam, and for comic relief in films such as Mettukudi and Naam Iruvar Namakku Iruvar. Despite going for the same trope, it’s the actors who make sure the scenes do not feel mundane. There’s a fantastic stretch involving Singaram’s tryst with Alexa and an oner where Vadivelu mouths an insanely lengthy dialogue. Even the scenarios that Vadivelu’s character is put through in this film remind us of his iconic roles in his various films. In a way, Gangers is Vadivelu’s Good Bad Ugly.
Gangers (Tamil)
Director: Sundar C
Cast: Sundar C, Vadivelu, Catherine Tresa, Vani Bhojan, Hareesh Peradi
Runtime: 159 minutes
Storyline: A bunch of teachers team up to pull off a heist to teach a valuable lesson
It’s rather pitiful that despite taking half of every poster’s real estate, Vadivelu’s screentime is way less than expected. It’s as if his screentime is what’s been heisted. The rest of the sequences offer very little and with ideas that leave us feeling been-there-seen-that, they fail to impress us with their emotional moments. For example, a cliched flashback that defines Saravanan’s backstory ends with the death of a character who, in the filmmaker’s Aranmanai franchise, would have come back to haunt the villains.
Gangers takes its time to use its arsenal of immensely talented actors, and instead, we get Sundar C thrashing baddies in a renewed attempt to showcase him as an action hero. One can play a drinking game on how many times his identity is mentioned as the ‘6-foot-tall guy’. Despite the likes of actors like Bagavathi Perumal, Hareesh Peradi, Mime Gopi and Munishkanth, not even their character names get registered. Catherine Tresa’s Sujitha is yet another damsel in distress who gets saved by everyone from the lead character to a school kid. Not to mention how she’s made to dance in a special number that adds no value to the film whatsoever. What can we expect from a character that’s written in such a way that she deciphers a goon-thrashing vigilante to be her fellow teacher Saravanan because of the same “technique” he employs to hit the volleyball?
A still from ‘Gangers’
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement
Behind the camera, C Sathya’s music comes very handy in elevating many aspects of the film, especially the otherwise monotonous action sequences. Gangers’ VFX looks extremely iffy, but for a film that’s stuck between being a comedy entertainer and a star vehicle-powered revenge drama, substandard graphics are the least of its worries. The final heist stretch, which involves an unnecessary rape joke and the age-old idea of cross-dressing to milk humour, is — like most of the film — savaged by Vadivelu. There are some interesting touches, such as a meta-reference to the director’s last release, Madha Gaja Raja and the climax within a theatre that’s filled with the director’s film posters. But the lack of this ingenuity in the script is evident, and the lengthy runtime does not help either.
Sundar C’s last film, in which he took both acting and directing responsibilities, wasAranmanai 4, and we called it the best in the franchise for how well-rounded it was compared to the other entries in that series. That balance is what Gangers desperately misses, given how it tries to stay stable despite having multiple sub-plots. What we end up with is a convoluted comedy of errors that’s single-handedly made tolerable and in some places enjoyable by the ever-dependent Vadivelu. The biggest takeaway from Gangers is that the veteran comedian still has it in him, and all it takes is a filmmaker like Sundar C, who is adept at making a comedy caper, to come up with a film that would showcase his strengths. That’s a film I’d like to take my gang to.
Gangers is currently running in theatres
Published – April 24, 2025 07:02 pm IST