Aishwarya Rajesh’s body language as a sportsperson is spot on, from her unflinching stride to how she holds her shoulders and the fire in her eyes. As in star vehicles, where a side character gives a major “build-up” for the hero before he makes his appearance, we hear of who Kousi is and see her back before we see her screaming ‘HOWWZZAAAT’ before the displaced stumps. The best scenes in the film are to do with these three characters as they try to balance their dreams with their immediate priorities and most of all – what will people say? What will people say when they see a girl dressed in pants and playing with a bunch of boys?Īishwarya Rajesh gets a hero’s introduction at a police station. But her mother, the hot-headed and sharp-tongued Savitri, will have none of it. Murugesan is the sort of man who checks the score at his father’s funeral (his bull, by the way, is called Kapil Dev) and he’s a doting father too, so he doesn’t mind very much when Kousi starts playing cricket. She saw the man weep when India lost a crucial match and she is determined to make India win for his sake. Little Kousalya wants to play cricket to make her father Murugesan (Sathyraj), a farmer, smile.
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