Dora (Tamil, 2017)
Most Hindus believe that our physical bodies are just vessels for the Atma (soul). The Atma is eternal. It moves from births to births to finish unfinished business and to re-pay unsettled dues. Everything happens for a reason, and the reason is this. Nothing happens by mere chance or at random for nothing. Every flutter of a butterfly wing and every whiff of the wind that regenerates takes place in a pre-determined fashion. But then that would nullify the role of free will in deciding the course of our lives or it our free will also pre-determined. I think Avicenna incurred the ire of his contemporaries when he posited that God is too great to be worried about the nitty-gritty details of things that happen but decides on things seen at a higher level.
This must be the basis of this movie. The soul of a dog (Dora) goes into a car to avenge the death of its owner. Nayanthara is the kick-ass protagonist which unknowingly becomes the owner of a second-hand car which becomes alive with her touch. Nayanthara (as Pavalakodi) is the recipient of the dog owner's heart (heart transplantation).
The story seems far out. A self-thinking car with the ability to self-drive and auto repair itself, including re-materialising broken windscreen and headlamps in a jiffy is laughable. The story is predictable. It seems that nowadays, abusing parents and ridiculing them constitutes comedy. 2/5.
Most Hindus believe that our physical bodies are just vessels for the Atma (soul). The Atma is eternal. It moves from births to births to finish unfinished business and to re-pay unsettled dues. Everything happens for a reason, and the reason is this. Nothing happens by mere chance or at random for nothing. Every flutter of a butterfly wing and every whiff of the wind that regenerates takes place in a pre-determined fashion. But then that would nullify the role of free will in deciding the course of our lives or it our free will also pre-determined. I think Avicenna incurred the ire of his contemporaries when he posited that God is too great to be worried about the nitty-gritty details of things that happen but decides on things seen at a higher level.
This must be the basis of this movie. The soul of a dog (Dora) goes into a car to avenge the death of its owner. Nayanthara is the kick-ass protagonist which unknowingly becomes the owner of a second-hand car which becomes alive with her touch. Nayanthara (as Pavalakodi) is the recipient of the dog owner's heart (heart transplantation).
The story seems far out. A self-thinking car with the ability to self-drive and auto repair itself, including re-materialising broken windscreen and headlamps in a jiffy is laughable. The story is predictable. It seems that nowadays, abusing parents and ridiculing them constitutes comedy. 2/5.
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