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Tourist Family Review

 

Casting : Sasikumar, Simran, Yogi Babu, MS Baskar, Elango Kumaravel, Bags, Mithun Jaisankar, Kamalesh Jegan

Directed By : Abishan Jeevinth

Music By : Sean Roldan

Produced By : Million Dollar Studios & MRP Entertainment – Pasilian Nazerath, Magesh Raj Pasilian, Yuvaraj Ganesan

Sasikumar, an Eelam Tamil, comes to Tamil Nadu from Sri Lanka illegally with his wife Simran and two sons and starts living illegally in Chennai.

Meanwhile, on the same day that Sasikumar’s family arrives in Rameswaram, a bomb blast occurs there. The police, believing that Sasikumar’s family is connected to this, try to catch the family and solve the case. What happened after that is told like a stage play in ‘Tourist Family’

One of the actors who can give the same expressions no matter what the character is, Sasikumar has done his usual job well.

Although Simran, who plays Sasikumar’s wife, does not have a big role, the person who appears older than Sasikumar on screen has managed to play the role of his wife without any problems.

Mithun Jaishankar, who plays the eldest son of Sasikumar – Simran couple, and Kamlesh Jagan, who plays the youngest son, have done their job flawlessly. Especially the little Kamlesh, who wakes up the sleeping fans every now and then.

Yogi Babu, who appears at the beginning of the film, disappears after that. Then he shows his head before the end of the film and disappears.

All the actors who play other roles like M.S. Bhaskar, Ramesh Thilak, Bucks, Ilango Kumaravel, Sreeja Ravi, Yogalakshmi have acted artificially.

The songs and background score with music by Shawn Roldan have gone on to add strength to the film.

Aravinda Viswanathan’s cinematography is designed to reflect the stage play.

The fact that editor Bharath Vikraman realized that the screenplay did not have many strong features and shortened the scenes and reduced the length of the film has helped the film a lot.

Although Abhishan Jeevin, who wrote and directed, has made the screenplay based on the plight of the Eelam Tamils ​​as the theme, he has tried to tell it humorously. However, since all the humorous scenes in the film are artificial, instead of laughing, he only makes you sleepy.

The first half of the film is like a Doordarshan serial of that time, and in the second half, director Abhishan Jeevin has tried to make the audience laugh by using Sasikumar’s eldest son’s love failure and the younger son’s mischief. Although the only thing that is enjoyable is that he ends the film with an unexpected and interesting climax at the end, what he says is not acceptable.