The Tamil film industry is probably the only one where two kinds of diametrically opposite cop films exist. We have the action movie with big stars as cops. In these films, the police are glorified to no end, even if they end up looking like vigilantes. Taanakkaran is the second kind, following the footsteps of Visaranai, Kaval Thurai Ungal Nanban, Jai Bhim and the recent and most excellent Writer. In these films, we see the rot in the police system. In the first few scenes of Taanakkaran, we see how the Indian police force was created by the British and how their training methods were intended to keep the police as servants to the System, which at that time was the British empire. Apparently, very little has changed.
Except for one flashback, all of Taanakaaran is set inside a police training school for new recruits. Some are young, like the Vikram Prabhu character. Some are middle-aged, and have come here after appealing to courts. And all of them will be pushed to the extreme, because the senior cops – played by Lal and Madhusudhan Rao – are like the British. Their mission is to create bootlickers, not people who challenge them or the System.
Taanakkaran is interesting mainly as a document of what police training is like. There are very few toilets, creating long lines of people waiting with a bucket – and yet, they will have to reach the parade ground by 4.59am. Bribery is encouraged. The good cops – played by Bose Venkat and an excellent MS Baskar – are constantly overruled. Through them, you see what happens to the cops who don't bow before the System. The story gets going when Vikram Prabhu gets on the wrong side of Lal and Madhusudhan Rao. And when they realise this man is not going to be a bootlicker, it becomes personal. It becomes: One man against the System.
The film, though, is not as intense or hard-hitting as Visaranai or Writer because Tamizh follows a very traditional mainstream template: he has made an underdog story like Lagaan. That in itself is not a problem. But where we got the sense of a team in Lagaan, here Vikram Prabhu plays the solo-hero who does everything – so the sense of a combined effort by his squad is missing. Right from the start, he questions the system. When asked what his caste is, he replies, Podhu edathula saathi sollra pazhakkam illa. That is, he will not disclose this information in a public place like the training ground. No wonder, at one point, we see him reading Karl Marx. No one else gets this kind of heroism.
The writing is very broad, without much specifics and with some abrupt transitions. There are two songs (especially a really random love song, featuring Anjali Nair) that kill the mood. I mean, this must be the first film I've seen where there is a love song but no love angle. There is also a lot of unconvincing and ill-fitting melodrama, like in the flashback of the Vikram Prabhu character, or in a suicide attempt by one of the trainees. The first half has a disjointed, episodic feel. But the second half is better, with more focus and a climax that's not bad. And I was impressed by the way Tamizh has it both ways: he says you cannot beat the system, and yet, he says, as an individual, you can try. That's a good thought to think about.