Review: ‘Ayalaan,’ starring Sivakarthikeyan, Rakul Preet Singh, Sharad Kelkar and Isha Koppikar

February 3, 2024

by Carla Hay

Tattoo and Sivakarthikeyan in “Ayalaan” (Photo courtesy of KJR Studios)

“Ayalaan”

Directed by R. Ravikumar

Tamil with subtitles

Culture Representation: Taking place in India’s Tamil Nadu state, the sci-fi film “Fighter” features a predominantly Indian cast of characters (with a few white people) representing the working-class, middle-class and wealthy.

Culture Clash: A villager and his two friends discover and protect an outer-space alien that a corrupt scientist wants to capture because of the alien’s access to deadly mineral that the scientist want to use to make weapons of mass destruction.

Culture Audience: “Ayalaan” will appeal primarily to people who are fans of stories about aliens from outer space, no matter how stupid and long-winded the stories are.

Karunakaran, Kothandam, Tattoo, Yogi Babu and Sivakarthikeyan in “Ayalaan” (Photo courtesy of KJR Studios)

“Ayalaan” is a sloppy ripoff of the 1982 classic sci-fi film E.T., but with the outer-space alien befriending adults instead of children, as the movie’s ‘heroes’ try to prevent the alien from being captured. This misguided film is just time-wasting idiocy. “Ayalaan” has a very thin and flimsy plot that is dragged and stretched out to extremely irritating levels during the movie’s 155 minutes.

Written and directed by R. Ravikumar, “Ayalaan” (which means “alien” in Tamil) exposes itself very early in the movie to be a cinematic abomination of horrible dialogue, tacky visual effects, and bad acting. It would be slightly inaccurate to say that “Ayalaan” wears out its welcome because this type of torturous drivel isn’t welcome in the first place, if viewers are expecting anything that’s reasonably entertaining. There is almost no imagination in this extremely derivative and annoying movie.

The main protagonist in “Ayalaan” (which takes place in the India’s Tamil Nadu state) is a cheerful but dimwitted man in his late 30s named Tamizh (played by Sivakarthikeyan), who lives in a rural village, where he loves and respects the environment. Tamizh sells mineral water to people in the village. Tamizh’s social circle includes his two best friends—buffoonish Tyson (played by Yogi Babu) and neurotic Sugirtharaja (played by Karunakaran)—as well as Tamizh’s middle-aged, mute roommate (played by Kothandam), who doesn’t have a name in the movie.

A corrupt scientist/business mogul named Aryan (played by Sharad Kelkar), who is based in the city of Chennai, owns Aryan Industries, which looks like a combination of a corporation and a scientific research center. Aryan is obsessed with finding a rare mineral called Sparc (which looks like a glowing blue rock), which Aryan believes has the most powerful energy source in the world. Predictably, Aryan wants to get possession of Sparc to extract the energy source so that he can use it to make weapons of mass destruction. Aryan’s most loyal and most ruthless cohort is Eliza (played by Isha Koppikara), who’s supposed to be a scientist but who acts more like a combat criminal.

Meanwhile, a child-sized green alien, who has the voice of adult male human (voiced by Siddharth), arrives by spaceship from outer space to put a stop to Aryan’s plan. Before he left, the alien was warned by his look-alike girlfriend not to eat the the junk food on Earth. “Ayalaan” mentions that this is the alien’s 324th secret visit to Earth. The alien has the ability to make itself invisible whenever it wants.

The alien is captured by Aryan’s accomplices and is brought to a secret lab at Ayran Industries. The alien is kept in a giant glass cylinder. Why does Ayran want to keep this alien imprisoned? Somehow, Aryan finds out that this alien knows where to find Sparc, so Aryan want to force the alien to tell him where Sparc is.

But that doesn’t happen in this scene. Instead, when Aryan puts his hands on the cylinder, his hands get stuck. The alien uses it as an opportunity to emit a green gas that fills the cylinder before breaking the glass and escaping. The green gas floats out of the cylinder. Whatever is in the gas causes Aryan, Eliza and the others to lose consciousnesses.

Meanwhile, Tamizh finds himself at a science expo for middle schoolers. He has a crush on a science teacher named Tara (played by Rakul Preet Singh), so he is thrilled to see her there. One of the first exhibits that catches Tamizh’s attention is called “Alien World,” from a boy who’s dressed as a green alien. Tamizh starts a casual conversation with the boy, who says his name is Tattoo.

A certain mishap at the expo causes a big fire, where the alien shows up and catches Tara before she falls to the ground. (Don’t ask. It won’t be the last you’ll see of Tara, because she’s the obvious love interest of Tamizh.) Most of the people in the building evacuate in time, but Tamizh is stuck in the building. He sees the alien trapped underneath a fallen display case and rescues it. Tamizh and the alien manage to escape before the fire can kill them.

Tamizh thinks the alien is the boy Tattoo whom Tamizh met earlier. While he is driving the alien to a hospital, Tamizh keeps thinking that a human boy named Tattoo is in his truck with him, even though the alien is obviously not a human. This foolishness goes on for several minutes until Tamizh sees the alien become invisible. It’s only then that Tamizh understands that he has a non-human creature with him in the truck. He continues to call this creature Tattoo after he brings it home and introduces the alien to his friends.

The rest of “Ayalaan” has an increasingly ridiculous series of events. Just when the movie looks like it could have ended one way, there are insipid plot twists that prolong this appallingly jumbled and vapid movie. The alien is neither fun nor interesting, while all the human characters are either generic or very irritating, with performances from the cast members to match. Oscar-winning “Slumdog Millionaire” composer A.R. Rahman wrote the music for this junkpile movie, which just goes to show that having an Oscar does not make someone immune to working on low-quality dreck.

As an example of the shoddy filmmaking, there’s a subplot about an American named Dexter Williams (played by David Broughton-Davies), a UFO enthusiast who saw the alien during one of the alien’s previous visits to Earth. Dexter speaks Tamil in the film, but it’s obviously an overdubbed voice because the actor spoke English while filming his scenes. (People who can read lips while someone is talking can easily spot this discrepancy.)

Dexter has a hard time convincing people that his alien sightings are real. He’s determined to find the alien again and then track it down. Somehow, Aryan finds out that Dexter knows that the alien has landed on Earth again. And so, Aryan summons Dexter to India, where Dexter is enlisted to help find the alien. It’s as ridiculous as it sounds.

And did we mention that Tattoo has the ability to heal human injuries and diseases, just by placing his hands on the affected areas? The movie takes a detour into a vapid subplot about how Tattoo becomes invisible and does these healings when he’s with Tamizh. And it isn’t long before Tamizh gets credit for these healings and people think he has superpowers.

During all of these messy subplots, there are chase scenes, emotional meltdowns, and the usual mindless shenanigans that you would expect to find in a substandard “alien on the loose on Earth” movie, where the “heroes” try to help the alien find its way back to its home planet. There are also some out-of-place musical numbers that act as filler for this already bloated movie. In “Ayalaan,” everything is so dialed up to the most asinine levels, if any outer-space aliens saw this garbage film, then they’d want to fly far away on a spaceship and go home too.

KJR Studios released “Ayalaan” in select U.S. cinemas and in India on January 12, 2024.

Review: ‘Code Name: Tiranga,’ starring Parineeti Chopra and Harrdy Sandhu

October 24, 2022

by Carla Hay

Parineeti Chopra in “Code Name: Tiranga” (Photo courtesy of T-Series Films/Reliance Entertainment)

“Code Name: Tiranga”

Directed by Ribhu Dasgupta

Hindi with subtitles

Culture Representation: Taking place in India, Turkey, Jordan and Afghanistan, the action film “Code Name: Tiranga” features an all-Asian cast of characters representing the working-class, middle-class and criminal underground.

Culture Clash: A spy has to choose between loyalty to the man she’s fallen in love with and loyalty to the Indian government, which has sent her on a mission to capture an international terrorist.

Culture Audience: “Code Name: Tiranga” will appeal primarily to people who don’t mind watching unrealistic action movies with silly storylines.

Parineeti Chopra and Harrdy Sandhu in “Code Name: Tiranga” (Photo courtesy of T-Series Films/Reliance Entertainment)

“Code Name: Tiranga” should have been titled “Code Name: Terrible.” That’s the best way to describe this insipid action movie that’s filled with unrealistic fight scenes, subpar acting and grossly moronic plot developments. This is the type of action flick that can make some basic video games look like masterpieces in comparison. And it’s yet another sexist movie about a female spy who’s written as someone who needs to sexually seduce at least one man in order to accomplish her goals.

Written and directed by Ribhu Dasgupta, “Code Name: Tiranga” takes places in various countries, as the protagonist Durga Devi Singh (played by Parineeti Chopra), a special ops spy for the Indian government, scurries around like a spy with no coherent plan, except to go from location to location and shoot a bunch of people. In some of these shootouts, Durga is the only person who’s up against at least 12 other armed opponents in the same location. But somehow, unbelievably, she’s able to take all of them down. Does she get wounded? Yes, occasionally. But when she does get shot, she makes a quick recovery that’s so unrealistic, even a child can see how phony everything is.

In the beginning of “Code Name: Tiranga” Durga goes undercover as a journalist named Ismat, to meet and seduce Dr. Mirza Ali (played by Harrdy Sandhu), a medical doctor of Indian heritage who is currently a Turkish citizen working for the United Nations. Mirza is visiting India but will be returning to Turkey soon. Soon after Mirza meets Durga/Ismat, they begin dating, and he tells her that he dreams of opening his own clinic to help refugees.

Why is Durga targeting Mirza for her seduction scheme? She’s been told by her superiors that Mirza has been invited to a wedding that is expected to be attended by their main target: a ruthless international terrorist named Khalid Omar (played by Sharad Kelkar), who has eluded capture for years. (Yes, this part of the movie’s plot is as stupid as it sounds.) Durga’s immediate supervisor is Ajay Bakshi (played by Dibyendu Bhattacharya), who doesn’t do much but show up unexpectedly in certain places and tell Durga what to do.

Mirza, who only knows Durga as Ismat, falls in love with her. And the feeling is mutual with Durga/Ismat, who feels guilty that she has lied to Mirza about her true identity. That doesn’t stop her from marrying Mirza two months after they started dating. This whirlwind courtship is presented in a very superficial way in “Code Name: Tiranga.” The movie never shows the wedding of Mirza and Durga/Ismat. It’s briefly explained that they eloped.

Of course, a spy who is expected to go on deadly missions on short notice can’t keep up this charade forever of being a journalist wife of a doctor. “Code Name: Tiranga” is so inept, the movie never really explains why Durga had to get married to Mirza under her fake identity, in order to be invited to a wedding where she was supposed to capture a terrorist. It just makes Durga look like an idiot, and it makes her betrayal of Mirza even worse than it could have been.

“Code Name: Tiranga” then turns into a turgid soap opera about Durga’s inner conflict of whether or not she should be loyal to Mirza or loyal to the Indian government. The movie’s shootouts and other fight scenes are mind-numbingly stupid, while the visual effects are tacky and cheap-looking. It should come as no surprise that Mirza is eventually put in harm’s way. And there’s another betrayal that’s revealed toward the end of the movie that’s very easy to predict.

“Code Name: Tiranga” tries desperately to look like it’s a female empowerment film because the protagonist is a woman spy. But it’s not female empowerment just because you put a gun in a woman’s hand, and you show her being able to win a fight against several men. Female empowerment for a woman protagonist also has to do with her intelligence and how she moves in a world where women are frequently not treated as equals to men.

In that regard, “Code Name: Tiranga” comes up very short, because it uses the tired old movie concept that a woman spy can’t possibly accomplish anything meaningful without having sex with one of her targets and/or with a work colleague. Male spies in movies almost never have their accomplishments dependent on who their sex partners are. And even the way that the “romance” is handled in “Code Name: Tiranga” ensures that Durga will be the one who’s punished for her decisions. “Code Name: Tiranga” is pretending to be pro-female, but it’s just a witless, boring and misogynistic film that does not deserve anyone’s time or money.

T-Series Films and Reliance Entertainment released “Code Name: Tiranga” in select U.S. cinemas and in India on October 14, 2022.

Copyright 2017-2025 Culture Mix
CULTURE MIX