Gentleman does something extremely rare with its heroine. Make that two, actually.
Rare thing #1: It bestows upon its heroine the supremely rare qualities for Telugu heroines - intelligence and independence. Now, ours is an industry which celebrates female dumbness and dependence (scratch that, it's called cuteness and delicateness around here). To take examples from recent big films, Samantha in
A Aa, Samantha in
Brahmotsavam, Rakul Preet in
Naannaku Prematho, Rashi Khanna in
Supreme, Lavanya Tripathi in
Soggade... the list goes on.
In this prevailing context, Gentleman gives us a heroine who's a talented VFX artist who's sent to London on work concerns. And she has the nerve and gumption to make her own investigations when life hurls perplexing miseries at her. Unreal!
Rare thing #2: It actually casts an intelligent and confident actress in an intelligent and confident role. So this other common thing our films do is give the heroine an important career or mindset and make sure they cast an "actress" who'll decimate every last shred of doubt you might have about her lack of sensibility. Catherine Teresa was an MLA in
Sarrainodu. Enough said.
Gentleman however casts Nivetha Thomas whose eyes do so much work it appears like she's trying to compensate for all the Aggarwals, Singhs, Khannas and Bhatias put together. We appreciate her even more when she shares screen space with Surbhi Puranik (who does some passable work but is by all means better off in a fairness cream advert). Thomas, who was previously seen in the Tamil version of
Drushyam, holds her own and the film together as well in the portions where Nani necessarily has to lay low.
So the heroine is one exciting aspect about Gentleman. And there are other exciting things, too. Only, the script is not among them. Because this is a thriller whose resolution is clear when the twist is brought in (and for anyone who's watched the trailer, the twist itself is no surprise).
As you may be aware, the movie has two girls Catherine (Thomas) and Aishwarya (Surbhi) whose respective love interests look alike. Jairam (Nani) and Gautam (Nani) looking alike brings about certain complications which make for the suspense in the plot. But like we said, there isn't much suspense here. Barring the details, you can pretty much see what's going to happen like the movie shared its Google Calendar schedule with you. And that's bad news for a thriller.
What also doesn't work is the pacing. A long chunk of the film is spent on the cutesy romance (two romances in this case) which seems to go on as its own distinct film. Even when the thriller picks up, we have painfully dampening songs (we gather there are only four, but it feels like there are seven). All put together, it's safe to say that Gentleman fails as a thriller.
However, it doesn't fail as a film. Paradoxical as it may sound, Gentleman is a good film which happens to be a poor thriller.
Nani, for instance, brings so much energy to the proceedings. He isn't doing much that is different from what he did in earlier films but we certainly haven't tired of it. Humour-wise, his timing is perfect. Sometimes the joke sinks in a moment after it happens and you find yourself marvelling at the guy. In addition to his antics, his charm and his emoting warrant a viewing.
Mohankrishna Indraganti, too, establishes himself as a director to reckon with. Even when a script is poor, a good director manages to get you invested in the scenes. Indraganti has us involved at various parts of the film even if we couldn't have cared less for the story. This kind of work is a far cry from direction whose sole purpose is to mechanically mount the script on to celluloid.
Indeed, it is the little things. The reaction shots, the intercuts, the BGM (some nice work by Manisharma), the stray jokes, the quirky courtship (the Surbhi-Nani track is refreshing but unnecessarily protracted)... all of these make you stay and invest.
But what's the point if the thriller is not giving the unexpected, you ask? The point is the film gives you unexpectedly good quality where a lesser director would have given you a computer algorithm. Take the Vennela Kishore (who appears to be filling the vaccuum left by Sunil and Brahmanandam) track. He plays one of those cantankerous bosses whom the employees love to hate. A regular film's joke would just be that the employees and boss share a testy relationship, perhaps with some rubber-faced expressions by Brahmanandam. Over here, though, it is how the employees hate him (dialogues with some inventiveness in them) and how the boss harasses them (watch out for the hilaorious stretch with Satyam Rajesh on the use of letter x). We laughed out pretty loud.
It is treatment like this that sets Gentleman apart. Where much of the industry appears to believe that the film is finished the moment you have a script and a star, Indraganti seems to believe that's where the film actually starts to get shape. He's right, you know.