BIRTH MARK TAMIL MOVIE REVIEW
Written by Sriram Sivaraman and Vikram Sreedharan, the film is directed by Vikram Sreedharan. The film is co-produced by Sriram Sivaraman and Vikraman Sridharan. Birth Mark is the first film that actor Sabir has signed after Sarbhata. Apart from Shabbir and Mirna, Borkodi Senthil, Deepti Orientalelu and Indrajith are also in the lead roles in this film.
Shabir Kallarakkal plays the role of a soldier named Daniel. Returning home from Kargil war in 1999. Then Daniel’s wife Myrna is pregnant. He doubts that this is our child. He then takes his wife to a mountain to give birth naturally, where they give birth naturally without any surgery or pills. Did Myrna finally have a baby? The story of Birthmark is whose child is it.
There are only five to six characters in the film. Shabbir looks good on screen with a toned body that makes you believe that he is an army officer. Through his performance, he has revealed the state of mind of a war returnee. Myrna, who plays the role of Jennifer, is 9 months pregnant throughout the film. She has shown the same difficulty as a real pregnant woman struggles to walk and sit. Deepti who plays the role of Amulu, Por Kodi who plays the role of Asha and Indrajith who plays the role of Sebastian have given good performances according to their respective roles.
The whole movie moves in a thriller genre and we are excited to see what will happen next. The writer of this film Sriram Sivaraman has produced this film. Shabir has expressed his doubts about whether the child inside his wife’s womb is his and at the same time his great affection for his wife.
The film is also technically excellent. Uday Thangavelu’s cinematography has shown the hill village very well. Music by Vishal Chandrasekaran and cinematography by Iniyavan Pandian add to the film’s strength.
The big problem in the film is that it doesn’t convey the point it is trying to make, and many people may not understand this film. By summarizing many things, showing one,
They are saying it in a metaphorical way by relating it to another. Similarly, at some places, the film is a bit out of touch with the real world. This also fails to instill a sense of authenticity in the film’s audience. Director Vikram Sreedharan is a bit misguided in his attempt to give a different film….