![solo malayam movie solo malayam movie](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/oDUvNrfvLSI/maxresdefault.jpg)
Next up, the story of a vet named Trilok – this works better because the rug-pulling works better. This, then, is the recurring factor that binds all segments: the stories are hugely emotional, but we remain distant, less involved than we should be.ĪLSO READ: BARADWAJ RANGAN’S REVIEW OF RAMALEELA Except once – when Radhika’s story about her father echoes the segment’s final image. We hardly feel the depth of this relationship, because the story keeps cutting back and forth in time (another constant across the four segments) – we never stay long enough in a moment to savour it, to understand how it colours the overall picture. He gets to know that Radhika (Dhansika), who’s blind, likes him. Dulquer plays Shekhar, a man with a “manufacturing defect” – he stammers. The first episode is the most underwhelming. Each story features an accident (sometimes literal, sometimes an accidentally revealed relationship), and each one is deepened by children, either unborn or, well, accidentally born. Each one is capped by twist, and despite the tragedies in the narratives, each segment ends with a happy image. Each one opens with a shot of the elements (rain in the first episode, wind ruffling a cyclist’s top in the second, etc.). Each one features Dulquer as a character named after Shiva.
![solo malayam movie solo malayam movie](https://cdn.quotesgram.com/small/66/93/1273643662-10305952_275408569297225_2668758575174255530_n.jpg)
Cast: Dulquer Salmaan, Dhansika, Ann Augustine, Prakash Belawadi, Qaushiq Mukherjee, Manoj K Jayan, Sai Tamhankar, Sruthi Hariharan, Neha Sharmaīejoy Nambiar’s Solo is an anthology of four shorts, anchored by Dulquer Salmaan in four flavours (had the actor been a newcomer, this would have been a heck of a showreel).