Beast Review: In previous films, Koquila the Swimmer and Dr. Nelson, the director drew humor in situations that would hardly be funny on paper. The Beast also has a serious backstory to the hostage situation and tries to make it funny. But this time it was far from successful. In fact, this movie rarely makes you laugh in the parts that should be laughed at and always makes you laugh when you try to play a popular character. The film begins with hope. There is a prologue featuring Veera Raghavan (Vijay), a senior RAW officer who heals a psychological wound after completing a mission to catch a terrorist (Lilifoot Paruki). He leaves the organization to get rid of the demons, but the mall with his girlfriend Beauty (Pooja Hegde, whose main function is to see) is captured by terrorists. Government spokesman Altaf Hussain (distorting Selvaraghavan's behavior) call. Terrorists rarely seem dangerous (and rarely kill hostages if they are trying to scare them), and these missions do not scare brave people like Veera. None of the hijackers are known, including the leader Saif (Ankur Ajit Vikal). "Innum konjam is rude kuduthurukalam," Veera said to Saif at the end of the film. This highlights how weak the antagonists are in the film. As in The Doctor, Nelson gives the protagonist a group of strangers to work with. Download Terrorists. But unlike the movie, the characters here have little screen time or motive to remember. Laughter could only cause VTV Ganesh, and Yogi Babu and Redin Kingsley's cricket annoyed after a while. The bumbling gangster duo from the previous film, Mahali and Keely, didn't impress this time either. Unlike the Doctor, who has seen such a character work In particular, women are completely isolated. Ironically, Nelson devotes more time to some heartbreaking characters, an elderly woman held hostage in a mall (Subbalakshmi) and a trade union minister (Shaji) who has a personal motivation to get involved in the rescue effort. Anirudh tries to match the scene with his notes, but by the time we're done, the lyrics are getting weaker, not worse or stronger, or even not working. It seems like Nelson relied entirely on his star to get the film out this time around, but with a script that doesn't let him do much, even Vijay can do a lot with his star power Also, Nelson could have used this plot set-up to turn in a nail-biting thriller. Instead, he gives us an unapologetic crowd-pleaser and a solid service to Vijay’s core fanbase.