

Kolamavu Kokila Review: Drug-peddling Nayanthara Shines in this Black Comedy
Nayanthara is excellent in scenes where she has to bring out the innocence of her character. Here's our movie review of Kolamavu Kokila.
A still from Kolamavu Kokila
Loading...
Kolamavu Kokila
Cast: Nayanthara, Yogi Babu
Director: Nelson Dilipkumar
After playing an upright Indian Administrative Officer on the right side of law in 2017 film Aramm, Nayanthara flips on to the other side in her latest dark adventure, Nelson Dilipkumar's Kolamavu Kokila. As innocent sounding as the title itself may be – kolamavu in Tamil means rice-powder used to draw alpana/rangoli – Nayanthara's Kokila appears naive and even a wee bit muddleheaded till her mother's (Saranya Ponvannan) potentially fatal lung cancer drives the girl to plunge into a drug cartel.
It is not that she connives and cons right from the start, but as luck would have it, she finds herself pushed into the seedy business after she had knocked all doors for money to treat her mother. A chance encounter with a drug operative, who uses the guileless, almost schoolgirl-like Kokila to get a packet of cocaine from the toilet of a women's hostel. And she walks through the police cordon in a breeze.
Yes, the film has far too many convenient junctures – call them sheer coincidence – for the script to get top billing. But if one were to overlook these, and Yogi Babu's (who sets up shop right outside's Kokila's) desperate affection for Kokila, which turns sillier by the minute, Dilipkumar's work stays on course without distraction.
A black comedy into which not just Kokila, but also her ATM guard father, her sick mother and college-going sister get sucked into, the movie manages to lighten the journey of a motley crowd, which includes good cops, bad cops, drugs dons in Chennai and their menacing boss in Mumbai.
Somewhat poorly paced and lacking any penetrating dark humour, Kolamavu Kokila manages to engage without throwing up too much blood and gore. Nayanthara carries the plot with conviction. She could have added a few variations to her docile demeanour though.
Rating: 3/5
(Gautaman Bhaskaran is an author, commentator, movie critic)
Also Watch
Cast: Nayanthara, Yogi Babu
Director: Nelson Dilipkumar
After playing an upright Indian Administrative Officer on the right side of law in 2017 film Aramm, Nayanthara flips on to the other side in her latest dark adventure, Nelson Dilipkumar's Kolamavu Kokila. As innocent sounding as the title itself may be – kolamavu in Tamil means rice-powder used to draw alpana/rangoli – Nayanthara's Kokila appears naive and even a wee bit muddleheaded till her mother's (Saranya Ponvannan) potentially fatal lung cancer drives the girl to plunge into a drug cartel.
It is not that she connives and cons right from the start, but as luck would have it, she finds herself pushed into the seedy business after she had knocked all doors for money to treat her mother. A chance encounter with a drug operative, who uses the guileless, almost schoolgirl-like Kokila to get a packet of cocaine from the toilet of a women's hostel. And she walks through the police cordon in a breeze.
Yes, the film has far too many convenient junctures – call them sheer coincidence – for the script to get top billing. But if one were to overlook these, and Yogi Babu's (who sets up shop right outside's Kokila's) desperate affection for Kokila, which turns sillier by the minute, Dilipkumar's work stays on course without distraction.
A black comedy into which not just Kokila, but also her ATM guard father, her sick mother and college-going sister get sucked into, the movie manages to lighten the journey of a motley crowd, which includes good cops, bad cops, drugs dons in Chennai and their menacing boss in Mumbai.
Somewhat poorly paced and lacking any penetrating dark humour, Kolamavu Kokila manages to engage without throwing up too much blood and gore. Nayanthara carries the plot with conviction. She could have added a few variations to her docile demeanour though.
Rating: 3/5
(Gautaman Bhaskaran is an author, commentator, movie critic)
Also Watch
Independence Day Flashback: Dispelling Myths Around the National Anthem
Tuesday 14 August , 2018
Deepika Padukone-Ranveer Singh Set to Get Married
Monday 13 August , 2018
Watch: Remembering Sridevi on Her Birth Anniversary
Saturday 28 July , 2018
Rajeev Masand Interviews Tom Cruise For Mission Impossible: Fallout
Thursday 02 August , 2018
Fanney Khan: Anil Kapoor, Rajkummar Rao, Pihu Sand On Why You Should Stop Worrying About How You Look
| Edited by: Manila Venugopal

Independence Day Flashback: Dispelling Myths Around the National Anthem

Tuesday 14 August , 2018
Deepika Padukone-Ranveer Singh Set to Get Married

Monday 13 August , 2018
Watch: Remembering Sridevi on Her Birth Anniversary

Saturday 28 July , 2018
Rajeev Masand Interviews Tom Cruise For Mission Impossible: Fallout

Thursday 02 August , 2018
Fanney Khan: Anil Kapoor, Rajkummar Rao, Pihu Sand On Why You Should Stop Worrying About How You Look
Loading...
Recommended For You
Kerala Floods: Technology Can Help During Natural Disasters And The Devastation Left in Their Wake
How a Madrasa in Kozhikode Turned into a Shelter for 400 Kerala Flood Victims
Hyundai India Reveals 1st Design Render of 2018 Santro (AH2) Compact Hatchback
Asian Games: Indonesia's Richest Man Going for Gold
Asian Games: Indian Coaches Live in Past, Need Foreign Help, Says Yogeshwar
Photogallery
Loading...
Loading...