Kutty Pisasu Review  
7 May 10, 05:15pm

Banner: Sri Thenandal Films, Azhagar Films
Direction: Rama Narayanan
Star-casts: Nasser,
Music: Deva
Cinematography: K. Selvaraj
Graphic: Silver Line

Firstly, it's worth mentioning that Tamil cinema hasn't made any apt films for Children though most of the filmmakers had boasted about delivering them. Of course, there have been few children based films that had some elements which in no way was apt for the kids. Say for instance, the previous week's 'Rettai Suzhi' had 12 yr old boy proposing his cousin girl and even kissing her.

Hats off to producer-filmmaker Rama Narayanan! He comes up with a film well-tailored for kids. The film has a simple storyline and indeed has an average screenplay. But, this is a movie you can watch just to pass your time.
If you're kid has grown watching the Hollywood kids based flicks and are play station maniacs, they have got nothing to do with it.

'Kutty Pisasu' has a car getting transformed into a Robot, which is nothing but an inspiration from Hollywood movie 'Transformers'.

The story is about a happy family (Ramji, Sangeetha and their girl daughter Keerthika). No worries have ever haunted them until their daughter goes by phenomenal activities. Later, they discover that their child is haunted by Sangeetha's long time friend Kaveri's ghost. At the same time, the car turning into a huge robot shocks the entire town. It’s exposed that ghost of Kaveri’s brother (Ganja Karuppu). The second half breaks open a discombobulating mystery behind the death of Kaveri and her brother and what’re are their ghosts about to do with.

Baby Keerthika has done a great performance as she seems to have rehearsed a lot much prior to standing before lens. She dances well, acts well and emotes extraordinarily to every sequence. Ramji and Sangeetha have nothing to do more with their minimal portions. Ganja Karuppu gets more footage unlike his previous films in which he had to just appear for the sake of comedy. Riyaz Khan as a baddie sleepwalks through the role. Delhi Ganesh and Manobala add to the humor quotients.

The scene where the miniature Kadhal Thandapani disguised as baby Keerthika creates problem inside Mutton stall is hilarious.

The graphics have been mastered well and the musical score could've been better.

If you've decided to watch this film, forget all your logical abilities, walk straight into the theatres, sip your drinks, munch your popcorns, sit back and relax.

Verdict: Watch it with kids and family
Rating: 3/5
Richard Mahesh