
He is written as an implausibly saintly figure even though his disability itself automatically makes the audience empathise with his character. The incidents involving this family’s problems is something that we have seen often, and yet, as a drama, it works.īut the character of Vikram is one-note. His railway clerk ‘mother’ (Jayasudha), who is the breadwinner of the family, detests him for having become a criminal, while his sister and brother give a damn about him. Seenu might come across as someone enjoying the perks that come in the way of his job, but we are also able to sense that deep down he would rather swap the riches for his family’s love.

The actor also nicely captures the astonishment and anguish of the character. The character is even slightly lecherous towards Keerthi (Tamannaah, whose brief for this role must have had only two words: dress fashionably), Vikram’s secretary, but it is because of Karthi that we look past this aspect. In Karthi, he has an actor who can be loud, blunt, and wide-eyed, and still remain charming.

And Vamshi gets the crucial element of casting right. Here, the two characters are Seenu (Karthi), a small-time criminal out on parole, and Vikramadithya (Nagarjuna), a man with an embarrassing amount of wealth. Director Vamshi sticks to the structure of the original and this largely helps his film because more than story and plot, this is a film that is about its lead characters. Review: A remake of The Intouchables, a 2011 French film that was a box office phenomenon in its home country, Thozha is heart-warming and crowd-pleasing, two qualities that ensure that we don’t dwell much on its formulaic plot that involves characters from varied socio-economic backgrounds learning life lessons from each other. Synopsis: A convict out on parole finds employment as the caretaker of a multi-millionaire, who is paralysed from neck down.
