Thakka Thakka
Thakka Thakka (transl. Attack Attack) is a 2015 Indian Tamil-language action drama film written and directed by Sanjeev,[1] whose younger brother, Vikranth, plays the lead role.[2] The film, earlier titled Piravi,[3] also stars Rahul Venkat, Abhinaya, Leema Babu and Parvati Nirban.[4] It was released by S. Thanu's Kalaipuli International on 28 August 2015.[5] The film was dubbed into Hindi as Phir Se Mafiaraaj. PlotThe story follows the life of two orphans: Sathya and Karthi. In Sathya's youth, his mother Thulasi was exploited as a sex worker by a man named Bala. After she gives birth to Sathya, he is presumed dead and is buried alive. Thulasi saves him and cares for him until Bala kills her. Sathya meets Karthi and they become friends, working for a restaurant owner named Annachi. Karthi is love with a girl named Indu while her friend Saranya often fights with Sathya. Things go awry when Indu is kidnapped by her uncle and is to be sold along with other girls as a sex slave. Karthi is killed in the process, and Sathya must fight the goons on his own. Cast
SoundtrackThe soundtrack was composed by Jakes Bejoy in his Tamil debut. The album was released by the Saragama label.[7]
Critical receptionThe Times of India rated the film 3 out of 5 and wrote, "Thakka Thakka is the kind of film that shows spirit even though it doesn't come together as a whole. There are moments that stand out, but the film lacks the tautness in writing that could have made it into a gripping action film".[8] Sudhir Srinivasan of The Hindu wrote, "Thakka Thakka's predictable, wafer-thin plot actually makes even seem like meritorious literary work in comparison."[9] Behindwoods rated the film 2 out of 5 and wrote, "On the whole what promises to be a thrilling action film loses track mid-way."[10] Silverscreen wrote, "Everything about Thaakka Thaaka, from the title, to the posters, to the trailers and promos, made it a point to tell the audience that the film is about action. The filmmakers wanted the film to be 'hard-hitting'. Perhaps they took the term too seriously, because most of the film is full of 'hard-hitting' stunts – punches, throat-slitting, stabbing, and hitting people with long iron rods."[11] References
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