Sanjay cannot remember anything beyond 15 minutes as he forgets names of places, people and is on a killing spree. The whole film unfolds in back and forth narrative style popularized by directors like Quentin Tarantino.Ī medical student Chitra (Nayantara) is keen to do a detailed medical study of Sanjay but is discouraged by her professor as there is a police case against him. The story of Sanjay Ramasamy (Surya) who suffers from short-term memory loss is very confusing and difficult to tell on screen but Murugadosss has been able to effectively convey it though intermittent flashbacks. Technically, Ghajini is far superior to the normal run-of-the-mill thrillers with a superb background score and re-recording of Harris Jayaraj. The basic thread of the film is borrowed from Christopher Nolan classic Memento but Murugadoss has Indianised a very difficult and complicated subject quite effectively. ![]() Yet it is taut, well written and woven with the right commercial elements. The story content and treatment is revolutionary for a Tamil film, though Murugadoss? screenplay takes far too many liberties. ![]() ![]() Ghajini is recommended for those who seek extra strong, stylish, over-the-top entertainment. Full marks to the director and Surya for coming out with one of the best edge-of-the-seat racy thriller seen in recent times. For once, all that pre-release hype lives up to its great expectations in A.R.Murugadoss directed Ghajini.
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