Lara Movie Review: A coastal mystery, more murky than deep
Lara Movie Review: Critics Rating: 2.5 stars, click to give your rating/review,Like a witness statement that holds up under basic scrutiny but reveals nothing groundbreaking, Lara
The Times of India,
TNN, Jan 2, 2025, 04.03 PM ISTCritic's Rating: 2.5/5Lara Movie Synopsis: A badly decomposed woman’s body washes up on Karaikal beach, posing a difficult challenge for the local police.
Lara Movie Review: In the sleepy town of Karaikal, director Mani Moorthi unfolds a whodunit that, much like its central corpse, reveals itself layer by decomposed layer. The premise – a woman's body washed ashore and CCTV footage of a similarly-dressed woman nearby – is promising enough to hook even the most jaded.
The film presents us with a veritable rogue’s gallery: an MLA whose political influence casts long shadows (Mathew Varghese), his nondescript son Maharoof (Ashok Kumar), a councilor whose driver Lawrence (Bala) seems to have misplaced his wife with suspicious convenience, and Singapore-bound suspects who are terrible at playing the game of faithful. Inspector Karthikesan (Karthikesan) is tasked with unraveling this mess. Who’s Lara and what’s her story? It’s a soup seasoned liberally with red herrings and served lukewarm.
Mani Moorthi’s direction shows promise in its calculated misdirection. The investigation bounces between a lookalike prostitute, the two useless men, and corridors of power where guilt seems to stick to everyone like the humidity. The film maintains its mystery well enough, though the investigation often feels like it’s following a hand-me-down manual from every other Tamil cop drama of the past decade.
The fatal flaw lies not in the story’s bones but in its flesh. Karthikesan, as the investigating officer, delivers a performance as memorable as last week’s police report. Also, the backstory of the arms smuggling bit of Lara (played by Anusreya Rajan) feels flimsy. The background score, rather than building tension, announces its presence with all the subtlety of a police siren at midnight, repeatedly hammering home a foreboding theme that becomes more irritating than atmospheric.
Yet there’s something oddly refreshing about the film’s modest ambitions. It doesn’t try to reinvent the genre wheel but rather takes it for a careful spin around familiar territory. The character motivations, when finally revealed, defy the easy categorization of good and evil – though this revelation feels less like a profound statement on human nature and more like a fortunate byproduct of competent storytelling.
Like a witness statement that holds up under basic scrutiny but reveals nothing groundbreaking, Lara performs its genre duties with workmanlike efficiency. It’s a film that proves you can tick all the right boxes on the suspense checklist and still leave your audience feeling like they’ve read yesterday’s case files.
Written By: Abhinav Subramanian