Yesterday, I happened to scan some movies of the bygone era. An era still prevalent but seemed historical. As I was examining them, a piece caught my attention. The piece was from none other but the very own king of mass entertainment, Rajinikanth. The god of masses, who mesmerized audience with his sheer cut-through style statements -- a quality which the Bollywood envies, Tollywood embraces and the people worship, is one super king of dialogues that enthralled the south-east Asia for decades. But the post is not about our "Thalaivar"'s stardom, it is about a lady who made a sheer comeback with her acting skills.
The character enacted signifies about an ego-maniacal lady with an unending passion for her love who, falls for his style and beauty that converts into an unlawful revenge. A revenge, taken after a patient ambush of 18 years when circumstances play a havoc on both of their lives. Credit must be given to the actress for portraying such a venomous role with perfection that the viewer fills his heart with hatred, post-screening. The presence surpasses our style king for some time, adding that, the plot moves in her way making her role gain more weight. The actress captures your mind, not from the start but on a stage when the protagonist's father passes away and her crave for the hero turns into a devilish retaliation. From then on, you watch the movie for the next move of the narrative and nothing else until the climax.
Many well-known critics have praised about the hero's "vintage stuff" state that this movie brought with, but it tends to be a skewed opinion. Credit must be given to the woman, who is the real central figure for, it hinted not only that a woman can equal a man, she can even surpass him in the process. A movie and a role so inspiring that it had to be penned down, not just on a micro blog but on the bigger version of it.