HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentPulimada review: A fierce, unsettling Joju in a confused thriller

Pulimada review: A fierce, unsettling Joju in a confused thriller

Till the point the film builds Vincent’s (Joju George) world, A.K. Sajan is sure-footed. But the director slips from the time Aishwarya Rajesh walks into the screenplay as Mahishmati, a stranded tourist...

October 28, 2023 / 11:23 IST
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Joju George turns Vincent into a compelling character study in 'Pulimada'. (Screen grab/YouTube/Appu Pathu Pappu Production House)
Joju George turns Pulimada's Vincent into a compelling character study. (Screen grab/YouTube/Appu Pathu Pappu Production House)

In a remote village in Malampuzha, a policeman with a troubling family history of mental illness, awaits his bride. Joju George plays Vincent with a naivete and eagerness that immediately makes him endearing to the viewer. His mother (Mala Parvathy) had schizophrenia, and this has made it difficult for Vincent to get married. The family background sets off multiple possibilities in the plot, and A.K. Sajan’s Pulimada begins on this intriguing note – is Vincent as innocent as he looks or is there a beast waiting to be unleashed within him?

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‘Pulimada’ means ‘tiger’s den’, and on the day of Vincent’s wedding, two catastrophes occur – his bride elopes with another man, and a tiger is reported to have entered the village from the forest. The amiable Vincent goes into a frenzy, unable to deal with the shock. “Why am I still standing here?” he repeatedly asks at the church, as his family tries to console him. From then on, Vincent spirals into a kind of rage that’s new to him and those around him.

Joju is adept at playing these sinister roles with nuance. His terrifying act as a sadistic rapist in Chola (2019) or identical twins with a dark secret in Iratta (2023) have shown us his range as a performer. In Pulimada, too, he turns Vincent into a compelling character study. As a policeman, his duty is to guard a major tourist attraction – the sculpture of the Yakshi. Interestingly, the large, naked sculpture of the female spirit reminds him of his mother. Vincent loved his mother but is also afraid of the sculpture. The Oedipal shades to the relationship, however, aren’t explored beyond this hint.