
Paramasivan Fathima Movie Review: This predictable film is ideologically inept and clumsily crafted
Generally, filmmakers find it easy to dish out social issues if their films are set in a fictional world. This helps you stay away from offending any powerful person, organisation or community. It also creates a space for uninhibited discussions. But filmmaker Esakki Karvannan is disingenuous with things he presents as issues and lacks honesty in exploring them fully.
Paramasivan Fathima introduces the fictional world of Subramaniyapuram and the towns split from it, namely Yokobpuram (predominantly Christian) and Sultanpettai (predominantly Muslim). The film begins with the narration that the rampant conversions are the reason for the split, and prospective grooms from both these towns die a day before their D-day. In parallel, we get glimpses of Paramasivan (Vemal) and Fathima/Tamilselvi (Chayadevi), teasing us with what could have happened to them even though the familiar stench of honour killing is discernible from a mile away. However, the film chooses to take a tiring 140 minutes to uninspiringly tell us the relation between the deaths and conversions.
Putting itself on a high pedestal, the film claims to impart some noble message, but is off the target right from the beginning. It reeks of contrivance, especially with no villager in this film having anything to do except be bothered by religion. It could be said that communal flare-ups in Tamil Nadu are few and far in between when compared to cases of caste discrimination. However, the absence of an engaging fictional story cannot be blamed on the social fabric of the state. The film should have ideally explored how bigotry comes in the way of religious harmony in the 21st century rather than creating a fictional world filled with people, who seem to be straight out of the Middle Ages.
The film also trivialises hunger and unemployment through Hindu characters coercing others in their community to not convert for "food and jobs" as though they aren't important enough for sustenance. The question is, what kind of pride should one take in a religion where one follower does not take care of another? Why will anyone not be grateful to someone from some other faith, who has taken it upon themselves to provide sustenance to live a dignified life? Also, it is important to note that the act of service done with an ulterior motive of converting more people to their religion cannot be brought under the umbrella term of 'service.' It is but a transactional relationship.
Can an apathetic person judge when someone from his 'brethren' converts to another religion after receiving certain favours from them? No. Some scenes and dialogues reflect the 'rice-bag convert' condescension in social media, but this anger would have been better justified if it was targeted at those depriving the starving people of their 'rice bag'. 20th-century American psychologist Abraham Maslow would have created a five-tier needs hierarchy that treats physiological and safety needs as having paramount importance for a bare minimum decent life. Food and material requirements aren't nothing. I am duty-bound to remind such self-righteous people that the miracle stories of Lord Krishna filling his impoverished friend Kuselan's house with riches just for a morsel of puffed rice and Lord Jesus multiplying five bread loaves and two fishes to feed 5000 people are being taught to their respective followers even to this day to praise God's glory, generosity and magnanimity.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
Penguins, platonic pyaar and a labubu love story
Twinkle Khanna aka Mrs Funnybones crafts satirical stories and funny fables when she is not running a design business, selling candles or running in circles around her small but rather odd family. She narrowly escaped a gruesome tragedy when Bollywood tried to bludgeon her brain to the size of a pea, but she ducked at the right moment and escaped miraculously unharmed; she is now a popular columnist as well and is currently in the process of creating lame jokes like ' Why do all Hindu boys worship their mother? Because their religion tells them to worship the cow.' She firmly believes that nothing in life is sacred except laughter. (Not even her name, which she is secretly trying to change to Chetali Bhagat so that her columns get made into movies.) LESS ... MORE 8am My younger one and I are debating who gets to hang the Coke-wielding Labubu on their bag today. This is unprecedented in our household — she usually leans toward Mr Beast sweatshirts, and my sartorial attempts are an ambiguous puddle of mostly Zara, sometimes what the Devil Wears (Prada), and God's favourite (if she hasn't lost everything in the stock market) Hermes. My daughter wins this contest with a simple fact, 'Mom, Labubu is a toy. I'm a child. You're an adult. It's like me wearing your big gold ring to school. It's not OK for your age.' Shamed by my own child, I give in. She hangs it on her backpack and rushes off to school. ILLUSTRATION CREDIT: Chad Crowe (USA) For the blissfully unaware, Labubu is a creepy elf conceived by the Hong Kong-born Kasing Lung and turned by Chinese toy retailer Pop Mart into a fuzzy cultural phenomenon. Everyone from Rihanna to schoolgirls in Mumbai are desperate to hang one on their bag. Pop Mart CEO Wang Ning's fortune jumped $1.6 billion in a day because of these stuffed dolls. Trump may keep imposing tariffs on China, but clearly, the Chinese are fighting back one creepy doll at a time. 10am I call my sister to blame her: 'You made me buy this Labubu, and now I'm hooked. In the mornings, I'm studying philosophy. In the evenings, I hang a Labubu on my bag. I don't know who I am anymore.' She replies, 'I do. You're an idiot. You've always been one. Who thinks so much about a bag charm?' 11am I call my older one. Considering he studies fashion, he should have some insights into this Labubu phenomenon. His verdict is, 'I don't get it, Mom. It's ugly.' I try to explain, 'You know, yesterday I just read a bit about Socrates once taking part in a beauty contest. He argued anything is beautiful if it fulfils its function. So, by that logic, Labubu is beautiful. It's designed to evoke nostalgia and the same emotional response we experience when seeing babies or puppies. Acha, forget all this and go to Oxford Street, line up at Pop-Mart and get me some more.' My son reports that it's a futile quest. 'Mom, it's pointless. BBC said that Pop Mart's stopped selling Labubus at high street stores because of all the chaos outside with queues and squabbles.' It's good to know that the BBC has found time between Gaza and Ukraine to cover Labubu sales. 3.30pm Scanning the news in amchi Mumbai, I note a ruckus at the Byculla zoo over the names of three newly hatched penguin chicks — Noddy, Tom, and Pingu. BJP's Nitin Bankar is leading a protest demanding that the penguins get Marathi names. If you ask me, they really should retain 'Pingu'. It fits with our cultural tradition of affectionate 'u' endings. Akhilesh Yadav is Tipu, Hrithik Roshan is Duggu, and Rahul Gandhi is Pappu. Then why not Pingu? Still, it's now a matter of national importance. 4pm A close friend recently diagnosed with a serious illness sends me a picture of her seven Labubus gifted by friends to cheer her up. A furry toy doing the job of Sadhguru and Sri Sri by mitigating the uncertainty of mortality. 4.30pm I come across Sydney Sweeney selling soap made from her bathwater. Better than the influencer who sold her farts for $1,000 and landed in the hospital after producing 97 jars by eating beans and boiled eggs. If Sydney wants her soaps to sell, she should harness the secret of Pop Mart's success — the thrill of surprise. Labubus are sold in blind boxes, so you don't know what you're getting until you open it. It reminds me of that Gold Spot contest when we were kids. We had to collect bottle caps with 'Jungle Book' characters. I don't even remember the prize. We were just chugging Gold Spot. The thrill of discovery trumps the actual reward. Robert Sapolsky, a neuroscientist who trained monkeys to recognise a light signal for a reward, concluded that the unpredictability of reward increases anticipation and dopamine. That keeps the monkey pressing the lever. Or the adult standing in line at 4am for a Labubu. 6pm My perpetually stiff neck has me lying on a hot water bag, interpreting Rorschach patterns on the damp ceiling. If we're being metaphysical, may I suggest that every man who turned out to be a headache began as a pain in the neck. As I reflect on this theory, the man of the house bursts in with two bags and lots of squeals. Like Santa with six-packs, he's pulled strings from Mumbai to Hong Kong to get us Labubus. Now we have an assortment. The purple one in a gold dress I christen 'The Sindhi Labubu,' as she looks like she is off to a wedding to outshine the bride. My headache disappears. My daughter's thrilled. And I realise I now own a collection of things I wasn't even trying to collect. 7pm I hang three Labubus on my bag as we leave for dinner. When my husband asks why I've taken them from our daughter, I say, 'For philosophical, anthropological, and psychological reasons. You know we're wired to find big-eyed things cute, whether they are penguins with or without Marathi names or Labubus. That reminds me, are you having trouble with the casting of 'Hera Pheri 3'? Forget human beings. Cast the three penguins. Rename them Raju, Baburao, Shyam. The politicians will be appeased, and you will save money on costumes, too, as they are already in tuxedos.' 'Please leave films to me.' he says, 'Focus on your creepy dolls.' I try explaining that a Labubu is simple to chase. Not like ambition or profit margins or self-worth. Real reinvention takes effort — therapy, sabbaticals, new degrees. Fashion is the lazy shortcut to reinvention. The reason we shift from skinny jeans to flares, ballet flats to jelly shoes. Or hang a fuzzy monster on our bags in a quest to update our identities. 'Labubus are the new recipients of my platonic love.' I tell him, 'In Plato's 'Symposium', Socrates says love for a person makes you vulnerable. They may leave or die. But loving a concept: astronomy, justice, literature can't hurt you. It won't leave. That is the origin of the term 'platonic love', by the way. Labubus can't love you back but they can't leave you either. Unless they are stolen. Hey, should we insure our Labubus,' I ask. 'Does this Labubu chap also sell blind boxes for new wives,' he says with a sigh. That's why I prefer platonic over romantic love. The object of your affection, along with not leaving you, doesn't talk back either. Facebook Twitter Linkedin Email Disclaimer Views expressed above are the author's own.


News18
9 hours ago
- News18
Kerala Travel Vlogger Applies Sindoor On Women's Foreheads In Viral Video, Draws Netizens Ire
Last Updated: The vlogger, identified as Maheen Shajahan shared the video on his Instagram handle where he was seen entering the temple with his friends and greeting them by placing sindoor. A Kerala-based travel vlogger is facing backlash after sharing a video of himself visiting a Hindu temple with foreign friends and applying sindoor to their foreheads. Many viewers have deemed the act inappropriate and disrespectful to Hindu traditions. The vlogger, identified as Maheen Shajahan shared the video on his Instagram handle where he was seen entering the temple with his friends and greeting them by placing a sindoor on their foreheads. 'Muslim boy in Kerala Temple; In Kerala, faith isn't a barrier – it's a bridge. As a Muslim visiting a Hindu temple with my foreign friends, I felt nothing but warmth, welcome, and peace. Here, in this lush corner of India, religious harmony isn't just an idea – it's lived every day. We respect. We celebrate. We share. Different paths, one love," he captioned the video. However, the clip quickly drew backlash online, with many netizens accusing him of misusing a sacred Hindu practice. 'Sindoor', the Hindi word for vermillion that married Hindu women apply to their foreheads, holds age-old significance in Hinduism. Traditionally worn by Indian women to signify their married status, 'sindoor' is first applied by a woman's husband during the 'pheras' (ritual related to marriage) on their wedding day. Amid the backlash, Shajahan clarified that none of the women in his video objected to his actions. 'I was very aware that married people put this (sindoor) but I wasn't aware that this was such an important thing and no other person can put it. If I would have known, I wouldn't have done that cause I'm a traveller and I try to respect all religions even though I don't believe in religion," he clarified in a statement given to Brut India. He also said that some were misusing his clip to fuel communal tensions, and apologised to those whose sentiments were hurt. top videos View All The video uploaded by Brut India went viral and many took to the comments to share their views on it. One user commented, 'Why is there so much intolerance in India?" Another user said, 'It's acceptable in movies but it's not for the reels." Shajahan left a comment on the video as well. 'Peace peace peace. I never tried to offend any religion. As a Malayali, I had the freedom to enter all the religious centers in Kerala without problems. I never had to face any backlash. We lived in peace. Unfortunately time changed and nowadays politics dividing people," he wrote. About the Author Shobhit Gupta First Published:


Time of India
9 hours ago
- Time of India
Tears, Glory, & History: Coco Gauff wins first French Open title in climactic battle with Sabalenka — Watch the epic finish
Coco Gauff added another feather to her burgeoning career on Saturday, capturing her maiden French Open title after a hard-fought three-set victory over world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka in the women's singles final at Roland-Garros. The 21-year-old American, currently ranked No. 2 in the world, rallied from a set down to prevail 6(5)-7(7), 6-2, 6-4, clinching her second Grand Slam crown and first on the Parisian clay. With this win, Gauff becomes the first American woman to lift the French Open trophy in a decade, following Serena Williams' triumph in 2015. COCO GAUFF HAS DONE IT 🏆 #RolandGarros — Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 7, 2025 A Dramatic Rematch, a Poetic Win This year's final offered a rematch steeped in history. Gauff had previously bested Sabalenka in the 2023 U.S. Open final, and on Saturday, she once again found a way past the power-hitting Belarusian. On a windy afternoon that saw occasional weather interruptions, Sabalenka began strongly, racing to a 4-1 lead in the opening set. Play Video Pause Skip Backward Skip Forward Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration 0:00 Loaded : 0% 0:00 Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 1x Playback Rate Chapters Chapters Descriptions descriptions off , selected Captions captions settings , opens captions settings dialog captions off , selected Audio Track default , selected Picture-in-Picture Fullscreen This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Opaque Semi-Transparent Text Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Caption Area Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Drop shadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Windows Users Don't Forget To Do This Before Saturday Read More Undo Despite her early lead, Sabalenka, who was playing in her first French Open final, struggled with composure as Gauff mounted a spirited comeback, forcing a tiebreak. Though the world No. 1 eventually secured the opening set, Gauff's resolve only strengthened. Second Set Surge Turns the Tide Gauff's court craft and relentless retrieval ability took center stage in the second set. She dictated the rhythm, pushing Sabalenka into repeated errors. The American broke twice and comfortably closed out the set 6-2. Live Events Aryna Sabalenka's frustration began to show visibly as she amassed an uncharacteristically high number of unforced errors—70 by match end. Gauff, in contrast, maintained her composure, using her agility and court awareness to counter Sabalenka's raw power. Climactic Finish Ends with Gauff in Tears The deciding set saw Gauff take an early break, but Sabalenka remained in contention, keeping the pressure on until the final game. At 5-4, Gauff served for the championship. Despite dropping a match point, she stayed locked in. When Sabalenka's final shot sailed just wide, Gauff collapsed to the red clay, tears flowing as the realization of her victory sank in. A video of the winning moment, now circulating widely online, shows Gauff overwhelmed by emotion, covering her face as applause filled Court Philippe-Chatrier. It was a moment of redemption three years in the making, after her loss to Iga Światek in the 2022 final. COCO GAUFF HAS DONE IT 🏆 #RolandGarros — Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 7, 2025 Gauff and Sabalenka: Rivalry Renewed This victory not only cements Gauff's place in the top tier of women's tennis but also rekindles her rivalry with sabalenka. The two have now met in two Grand Slam finals, each providing a showcase of contrasting styles—Sabalenka's brute force versus Gauff's tactical finesse. While Sabalenka, 27, leaves Paris without the title, her run to the final—on a surface less suited to her power game—bodes well for the hard court season. The reigning U.S. Open champion will look to regroup ahead of the summer swing. FAQs Did Coco Gauff win the 2025 French Open? Yes, Coco Gauff won her first French Open title on Saturday, defeating world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka in a dramatic three-set final. What was the final score between Gauff and Sabalenka? Gauff rallied from a set down to win 6(5)-7(7), 6-2, 6-4 in the women's singles final at Roland-Garros.