HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentCustody review: Naga Chaitanya’s thriller is all action, let down by weak writing

Custody review: Naga Chaitanya’s thriller is all action, let down by weak writing

Custody has several familiar faces in pivotal roles, including Sarathkumar, Priyamani, Ramki, Sampath Raj, YG Mahendran, Jiiva and Anandhi, but the writing is too predictable to really make use of the talent on board.

May 12, 2023 / 15:45 IST
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Naga Chaitanya as Siva in Custody. Chaitanya’s rakish charm rescues him from the weak writing to a certain extent. (Image source: Screen grab/Custody trailer)
Naga Chaitanya as Siva in Custody. Chaitanya’s rakish charm rescues him from the weak writing to a certain extent. (Image source: Screen grab/Custody trailer)

Venkat Prabhu’s Telugu-Tamil thriller Custody begins with a disaster in the year 1996 – an explosion on the road that takes many lives. Fast forward to two years later, and constable Siva (Naga Chaitanya) is leading a fairly uneventful life with minor bumps – his girlfriend Revathy (Krithi Shetty) wants to get married and his superior officer dislikes him for his proactiveness and caste location. But everything turns upside down on a fateful night when his love life intersects with his professional duty.

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Ahead of the film’s release, Prabhu revealed that he’d been inspired by the Malayalam film Nayattu (2021) to write Custody. Like Nayattu, Custody too is about a policeman who is hunted by his own due to political reasons and must fend for himself. But the treatment of this premise is wholly different in Custody. While the Malayalam film underlined the helplessness of individuals within a corrupt system, Prabhu’s interpretation leans towards a conventional narrative that has an infallible hero at its centre.

Siva’s mission is to produce Raju (Arvind Swami), a dreaded criminal, at a court in Bengaluru. Arvind Swami, who was once the chocolate boy hero of Tamil cinema, has had a remarkable second innings as the antagonist ever since he played Siddharth Abhimanyu in Thani Oruvan (2015). Prabhu gives him plenty of opportunities to display his swag and Swami doesn’t hold back. The role, though, is underwritten and we never really get why Raju does all he does – or why he insists on calling himself Rasu instead of Raju.