The Malayalam campus comedy Athiradi could well be the first feelgood movie in existence to open with a fatal stampede at a rock concert: here's a film that, much like its young hero, learns how to take even disastrous events in its stride. College freshman Samkutty (Basil Joseph, the amiable beta of 2024's Guruvayoor Ambalanadayil) enrolls with limited braincells under what looks alarmingly like the beginnings of a mullet, and precisely zero game around the opposite sex; his very voice sounds like it's attempting to break again. Still, he's a young man with a plan, and the plan is to revive the campus's annual music festival - an event that, as that prologue illustrates, turned deadly five years earlier, when his older brother Joppan (Vishnu Agasthya) was running things and watched on in horror as his sweetheart was trampled underfoot. Joppan has been in a depressive funk ever since, so Samkutty's quest isn't just to install himself as the big man on campus, but to restore both family honour and his brother's mojo. What's unusual is that, for a long while, the comedy in debutant writer/director Arun Anirudhan's film is more administrative than zany, a matter of Samkutty petitioning the relevant authorities in the hope of getting his way. This, it's implied, will be the making of this particular civil engineering student: first he will build it and then, he hopes, people will come. Those of us watching on from the cheap seats can only hope his festival will prove more Field Day than Fyre.
Although it appears to have drawn college-age audiences keen to see an onscreen institution of higher education that looks not unlike their own, Athiradi isn't an especially surprising comedy. We know the girl Samkutty wants, because he makes eyes at fellow freshman Swathi (Riya Shibu, the Delulu of last year's Sarvam Maya) during initiation, and we're pretty sure the festival will go ahead in some form, so all that's left is to guess what the obstacles will be, when they'll appear and how our guy will overcome them. The big intermission twist, emerging from a mass brawl on the outskirts of town, merely carries the film back in the direction of 2024's Fahadh Faasil hit Aavesham. Athiradi isn't as funny as that predecent, but that's not a bad comic model for a young writer-director, nor for a good night's entertainment, and the new movie shares at least two winning qualities with its protagonist: dogged persistence and geniality. You're quite happy to sit there as its foolish schemes unravel and it makes its silly jokes. Early on, we hear gossip that Samkutty has even petitioned the local bishop to bring the festival back - and Anirudhan duly shoots the cutaway that confirms this unholy intervention, complete with befuddled priest; running gags involve the unhip marble company brought on board as festival sponsors, and a synchronised dance troupe who take the form of an angry mob but toss their weapons so as to bust moves rather than heads. (I was going to say Athiradi works from a more realistic base than Aavesham, which had the wackiness of a live-action cartoon, but then I remembered that that mass brawl also involves a malfunctioning robot from the school's science department. Athiradi is very much a comedy for anybody who believes there should be more malfunctioning robots in cinema.) The patchwork second half takes a turn for the postmodern, as the students and their gangster foe (Tovino Thomas) vie for control of Vineeth Sreenivasan, the real-life entertainer (playing himself) who serves as the most illustrious of in-jokes. (For Western readers: imagine Daniel O'Donnell caught up in a Guy Ritchie caper.) And while the finale, in which we sense Samkutty finally becoming a man, hinges on a concrete squirt gun we've previously seen fail in first-reel R&D functioning at long last - there may well be a Freudian reading - Anirudhan also pulls off something more heartfelt involving the festival logo. A minor event in the release calendar, Athiradi is not unlike one of those festivals where everyone behind the scenes gives of their best while the featured artists play the hits: no great surprises, all told, but everyone goes home alive and satisfied - and a cinema ticket is still far better value than a three-day pass. No scam.
Athiradi is now playing in selected cinemas.






