100 Days Of Love
100 Days Of Love
| 20 March 2015 (USA)
100 Days Of Love Trailers

Balan, a columnist, falls in love with his schoolmate, Sheela. What happens when Balan comes to know that Sheela is in a relationship with Rahul?

Reviews
ManiakJiggy This is How Movies Should Be Made
GurlyIamBeach Instant Favorite.
Nessieldwi Very interesting film. Was caught on the premise when seeing the trailer but unsure as to what the outcome would be for the showing. As it turns out, it was a very good film.
Connianatu How wonderful it is to see this fine actress carry a film and carry it so beautifully.
braddugg Utter waste of time.This is a Malayalam film dubbed into Telugu and I saw it yesterday.After first 15 minutes, I decided that there is no point watching this film. Dialogues are bland and acting is superficial. The screenplay is lame and cinematography should better be not talked about. I have wasted my time watching this and I am wasting more time reviewing it. I just wanted to say all my readers to be warned of the film. I found nothing I can take back or value in the film. Perhaps, a black and white song. Everything looked artificial and manipulative only.A 0/5 for this.
Sandy Reviews The makers do justify the tag-line 'Pranayam Annum Innum Painkili aaanu' with a lot of sequences in the movie. And if one chooses to be, the movie will be a critic's delight as well !!!! But if not, this Balan K Nair - Sheela love story is one well-shot and beautifully cinematographed movie that ends up being a 'sweet' , 'good' and 'engaging' presentation of an age-old love story. The sequences laced with a lot of gentle humour and beautiful frames is the major highlight of the movie and the performance of the Dulqar-Shekhar Menon combo adds a definite 'charm and gloss' to the proceedings. On the evidence of this film one does get the feeling that Kamal's director son Jenuse Mohammad is one to look out for :)
sesht Most of us watching this today were apparently primed on the pairing of Salman and Menen in Mani Ratnam's upcoming 'OK Kanmani'. But that's some time away, and in the meantime, we have this.As always, for any specialty release (read - other than the local language/s, and playing only in 1/2 cinemas for 1/2 show/s for the entire week), there was little to no publicity, and no English subtitles in the showing I got to sit thru (not really bothered nowadays, but many people I watched it with were verbally abusive of theater management, and might well be missing next time around, but I don't think anyone cares).One concern I did have going in, was that this was gonna be the desi ripoff-of/homage-to '500 days of summer'. Phew. Thankfully not.Salman and Menen are getting together after not being in the same frame in 'Bangalore days'.The good parts:Very, very competently made, and slickly packaged. Every department complements the narrative, except perhaps for the departments/persons responsible for pacing (I do not want to single the editor/s out). It....flags....and how. It has almost been lovingly photographed, and both the prod and the art design are simple, yet sumptuous.I've never seen Salman so sure of his character and his performance. I have seen him grow over the movies I've seen him perform in, but in this one, he's in character throughout, and except perhaps for some forced angst in his scenes with his boss, and when it comes to his work, he was almost perfect.Nithya Menen, as she is wont to, right since 'Ala modalaindi', lights up every frame she's in, and this is consistent, especially when it comes to her intro in each and every movie she's been in. The magic does fade towards the latter half, but by then, she's had most of us hooked.The background score was alright, but 2 of the main songs 'Arike Pozhiyum', and 'Ninnekaanaan Kinaakkall' (the former more so) stood out during this viewing. But the overall feeling the music (and, to repeat myself on this, the cinematography) left me with was one of pleasantness. Like taking a vacation at a calm/natural habitat such as a beach or a hill station at an hour bereft of other hangers-on. There'll be no denying from any quarter that the movie looks, and sounds beautiful. 'OK Kanmani' has some living up to do in these departments, even though that happens to be a hallmark of Mani Ratnam, in spite of a few recent mis-steps.The main lead's sidekick has almost as much screen-time as the main leads do, and that's astonishingly progressive, at least to me, especially in the local milieu. It also helps that his characterization was well thought out and executed.Breaking the 4th wall: worked for this. A couple of sleight-of-hand maneuvers that I did not see coming, at important junctures in the tale. Augmented the main lead's characterization, and that's always a good thing, since having the audience field for the main leads is what the makers should be trying for always.The friendly manner in which the makers try subverting the local romantic genre's staples, while also unapologetically using the very same, while feeding us a spiel that it is not the case, seemed clever while watching the movie, but seems a tad weak now, since it is being done to death, and is not as fresh as, say, 'Dum lagake haisha'. The mainstream aspects are not overdone. That IS always good.Someone looked a little roly-poly this time around. Yum.However, it has to be said that the movie is not titled aptly, in addition to which there's not much meat, and there are quite a few clichéd moments in a movie purportedly demanding us to consider it grounded. Almost hypocritical, if only the makers did not keep drumming that message quite a bit. Certain threads go nowhere, and could've have been edited out (there may have been a good joke-in- the-making about the call to Mr. Nair, but I'll be damned if anyone else in the hall got it, and why the makers thought it was so funny - many were actually turning around and looking at their neighbors when it was pursued with in multiple sequences, including the all- important final moments of the flick - I'm missing a metaphor somewhere, perhaps). OSO's Kaanjaani (Aju Varghese) was not utilized t his potential, along with senior Vineeth's always-strong screen presence being wasted. Praveena, playing the part of Vineeth's wife and Menen's mom, who was such a strong force in 'Mili', surprisingly doesn't have much to do in this one. Also, making certain things obvious, like a supporting characters consuming alcohol at her own place, was like hammering a message that we do have progressive characters in this flick (don't bother to check for 'that' correlation, btw), so this is a nouveau-romance....blah blah. No matter how progressive the movie purportedly is, it gives the supporting female characters short shrift. I found that strange, especially since the casting was there (but perhaps the writing was not). And oh, all those annoying disclaimers on booze and smokes littering the beautiful frames throughout, along with blurring out the brands - I really have no idea when certain minds are gonna mature in this...............and have no hope either.However, if living with those irritants is bearable (along with braving the heat, traffic, crowded malls, non-functioning air- conditioning and rude staff et al), this is a good theatrical watch for the weekend. It does not demand much of you, in terms of grey matter, while it purports to be more than it actually is, and though that is misguided, it is not necessarily a bad thing.
Govind Nair 100 Days of love is a one-time watch. The movie is based on the daily lives of two mediocre men leading a messy routine. The plot thickens after one of them falls for a stranger. The first half will reward you only with a couple of giggles. The latter half, however, shines forth convincingly. There are multiple instances which caters the viewers with the makers' cliché-ridden ideas. Looking at the other way, the movie is relishable. Also, not choosing to involve hysterical action scenes is highly appreciable on the director's part. After becoming aware of the title of the flick, the first thing that struck my mind was Marc Webb's '500 Days of Summer'. By the first half, I could figure out that the two plots had nothing in common. Also, the plot and the title seemed totally unattached, in my opinion. Letting it go, the film possesses an average run-time and ends on a predictable note. The acting crew is undeniably praiseworthy. Lead actor Dulquar Salman as BKN Nair delivers an amiable performance. I am certainly rooting for his forthcoming projects. In spite of getting a smaller screen time, female lead Nithya Menon is charming, as cute as one could get. Sekhar Menon in a highly supporting role brings humor to the narrative, fashioning it into a romantic comedy. Other supporting roles played by Aju Varghese and Rahul Madhav are mediocre. Performances by Vineeth and Praveena in their minor supporting roles too are fair to middling. Writer-Director Jenuse Mohammed has managed to pull off a congenial job. Even so, some enhancements could've made the screenplay look superior. Departments dealing with Editing and Cinematography haven't failed to capitalize. Music by Govind Menon is soothing. The background score is certainly pleasing.Considering everything, 100 Days of Love is definitely not what its title suggests. It is a film based on coincidences. Jenuse Mohammed takes you to another journey where the guy gets friend zoned and eventually gets out of it. People who indulge in watching romantic comedies will definitely embrace this one.