On the ‘Annapoorani’ debate: the tyranny of taste

Art can render visible and known what was hitherto unspoken. One of the temples that Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited in the run-up to the consecration ceremony of the Ram Temple in Ayodhya was the famous Ranganathaswamy Temple in Srirangam. Interestingly, the sprawling abode of Ranganatha, a form of Lord Vishnu, is also featured in the Tamil film Annapoorani. The inspiring story of a Brahmin priest’s daughter who wants to become a top chef made the news when it was unceremoniously taken off by Netflix after some Hindu groups complained that the film about food was in bad taste.

Finding the ‘unique’ in art

The film argues that food is an emotion. Early in the Nayanthara-starrer, the priest who prepares the offering for the lord whets the curiosity of a set of tourists by explaining the legend of Tulukka Nachiyar or Bibi Nachiyar, “the Muslim lady” that is documented in the temple records. Painted on the wall of the corridor that is adjacent to the sanctum of one of the oldest temples in India, he says, the real name of Tulukka Nachiyar was Surathani and that she was the divine consort of Lord Ranganatha.

right-wing groups lodged complaints saying the film had hurt the feelings of Hindus

Said to be the daughter of Malik Kafur, the general of Delhi Sultan Allauddin Khilji, she developed a bond with the idol that her father and his army had looted from the temple in the 14th century. The Vaishnavites plotted to get the idol back and succeeded, not realising the deep affection that Surathani had developed for the Lord. She rushed to Srirangam followed by the Sultanate’s army but could not find the idol. Devastated, she perished at the door of the temple waiting for her lord. Since then she is entrenched in the collective memory of the devotees. The day’s first offering comprises north Indian chappatis, butter, and dal and it is offered to the lord’s consort as well. On special occasions, the idol is wrapped in a red, checkered veshti. It is perhaps the only temple in the country where a Muslim is venerated as a goddess by the Hindus. This is the tolerance and accommodation that our civilisation is known for.

The role of art is not to find what is common but what is unique and it is the uniqueness of our diverse culture that Annapoorani serves on the table in no uncertain terms. In its structure, the Nilesh Krishnaa film is a regular story of an underdog laced with a predictable background score but it provides the lay audience plenty to chew on how caste still limits career options and how a young, enterprising woman is not allowed to own up to even her mistakes.

Merely skimming the surface

The spoiler is warranted because right-wing groups lodged complaints in police stations in Bharatiya Janata Party-ruled States that said the film had hurt the feelings of Hindus as it promoted Love Jihad. They were offended because the priest’s daughter in the film has a Muslim friend, Farhan, who helps her get over her inhibition to cook and taste non-vegetarian food by citing verses from the Valmiki Ramayan that indicate that Lord Ram and Lakshman consumed meat during exile.

Those who can read the film can see the bond between Annapoorani and Farhan in the context of the introductory mythical tale but those with fragile sensitivities in the current socio-political milieu find the depiction fitting into their definition of a conspiracy theory about Hindu women being seduced to convert to Islam.

Notably, the film was cleared by the Central Board Of Film Certification (CBFC) and had a smooth theatrical run in December. The controversy arose only after the Hindi dub of the film was released on the OTT platform at a time when the countdown to the grand Ayodhya event had begun. Since then, the producer and the lead actor, have apologised for inadvertently hurting sentiments, and artistic freedom in the country has taken yet another hit.

It seems those who pick on mainstream films deliberately watch them selectively in bits and pieces and don’t appreciate the overall intent of the makers. It is not new malaise, though. Those who grew up during the Congress rule would remember the hoopla over Steven Spielberg’s Indian Jones And The Temple of Doom for showing monkey meat being served in India.

Last year, a senior minister from the BJP-ruled Madhya Pradesh took umbrage over the saffron bikini of Deepika Padukone in Pathaan but when the film released and it was discovered that the actress is playing a Pakistani Muslim, the opposition petered out. Then the Ministry of Information & Broadcasting sought an explanation from the CBFC for not chopping off a scene in Oppenheimer where the protagonist is reading Bhagwat Gita during a deeply intimate scene. The fact that the father of the atom bomb is known to have structured his life around the philosophy of the revered Hindu text didn’t cut ice with those who wanted to skim only the surface in the face of an outcry on social media.

It is not that the charges went completely uncontested. Former CBFC member and seasoned filmmaker Dr. Chandraprakash Dwivedi who faced FIRs and an official ban for Mohalla Assi, told this journalist that in his opinion it was not the victory of Hindu ethos but the victory of the Victorian mindset towards sex wherein sex is considered a sin. Known for meticulous research, the director of Chanakya said, “In many Hindu scriptures union of man and woman is described as sacrifice — a yagya.”

After the Annapoorani controversy, noted artist Shuddhabrata Sengupta wrote a social media post where he cited references to hunting and meat-eating from Valmiki Ramayan. Describing himself as an atheist who read Valmiki Ramayan as an epic poetry in Sanskrit, Sengupta went on to say there was nothing wrong in a Muslim citing from a Hindu text, for one of the most accessible translations of Valmiki Ramayan into English is by Sanskrit scholar Arshia Sattar who happens to be a Muslim.

The need to protect creative freedom

Nayanthara in a still from ‘Annapoorani’

Nayanthara in a still from ‘Annapoorani’

Another scene of Annapoorani that offended sensitive taste buds was when the protagonist was shown offering namaaz before cooking Ambur biryani during the climax. Annapoorani performs the ritual because Farhan’s vegetarian mother, from whom Annapoorani learnt the art, told her that it adds to the taste. It irked the self-appointed custodians of faith but when a Muslim scholar, during the television coverage of the Ram Temple event, said that the Persian word namaz has its roots in the Sanskrit word Namah (reverence), it was lapped up. Why is it that the former is often opposed and the second is usually welcomed? It is the same when Bade Ghulam Ali Khan sings raga Yaman in praise of goddess Saraswati or Ustad Vilayat Khan renders raga Bhairav or for that matter Mohd Rafi sings ‘Man Tarpat Hari Darshan Ko Aaj’— it becomes a symbol of syncretic culture. However, when Salim-Javed makes Vijay don badge no 786 in Deewar, ulterior motives are seen in it in retrospect.

Often such debates end abruptly when someone says, “Oh! you don’t dare to question the orthodoxy in other religions.” There is no point in becoming the mirror image of something that looks atavistic and feels intolerant. Having said that there are examples like Secret Superstar (2017) where the desire of a young Muslim girl to become a singer is almost put to an end by her father in the name of culture and religion. Then Mee Raqsam (2020) tells the story of a Muslim father who supports his daughter’s desire to become a classical dancer while standing up to the orthodox clergy.

The controversy, once again, brings out the doublespeak of the reigning guardians of free speech. If we truly believe in Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam (the world is one family), if we pontificate from pulpits that the DNA of all Indians is the same, can we say that the kitchen of goddess Annapurna, on whom the protagonist is named, will prepare only one kind of cuisine or will feed only people of one faith, one taste?

Moreover, the film engages in an interesting debate on taste. When Annapoorani loses her sense of taste, one of her core strengths, because of an accident, her mentor instills confidence in her by reminding her that no one tastes the prasad before it is served to the god but it still tastes great. By the end of the film, Annapoorani rises above the handicap of taste to push the boundaries of her art, and her emotion. As Marcel Duchamp, the father of conceptual art famously said, taste is the enemy of art.

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Here’s Why Netflix Removed Nayanthara’s ‘Annapoorani’ Days After Its Release

Nayanthara’s Tamil film, Annapoorani: The Goddess of Food, has been embroiled in controversy ever since it premiered on Netflix on 29 December. The film received huge backlash from several right-wing groups and the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP), claiming that it “hurts” the religious sentiments of the Hindu community, especially Brahmins.

On 10 January, the makers of Annapoorani issued a formal apology to VHP and withdrew their film from the OTT platform in response to an FIR lodged by the Hindu IT cell’s founder, Rakesh Solanki, on 6 January.

Here’s all you need to know about the controversy:

Here’s Why Netflix Removed Nayanthara’s ‘Annapoorani’ Days After Its Release

  1. 1. What is Nayanthara’s ‘Annapoorani’ About? 

    Annapoorani, which is co-produced by Zee Entertainment, was released in theatres last year, on 1 December. Although the film opened to mixed reviews from critics, it was a box-office failure and was consequently launched on Netflix after receiving approval from the Censor Board’s Chennai regional office.

    Helmed by debutant director Nilesh Krishnaa, Annapoorani follows the story of a Brahmin woman (played by Nayanthara) born into an orthodox family who defies social odds to become India’s best chef.

    Farhan (played by Jai), Annapoorani’s classmate and supposed love interest, assists her in navigating the conventional challenges regarding her caste and beliefs and encourages her to go beyond the prejudices to achieve her dream.

    Nayanthara and Jai in a still from the film.

    In the film, Nayanthara’s character is shown going against her family’s religious beliefs by eating and learning to cook meat to enter a high-stakes cooking contest.

    In accordance with rigid caste rules, most Brahmins in India do not consume meat.

    • According to a survey conducted by the Pew Research Centre in 2021 among 30,000 Indian adults, most dominant caste Hindus are often vegetarians; however, only 2/5 of the Hindu population is vegetarian in India.

    • Siasat.com, which published a detailed report on the National Family Health Survey 2019-21: Meat Consumption Trends, also pointed out a significant increase in India’s meat consumption from 2015 to present.

    • The report further added that Hindu meat-eaters in India increased from 44.4% to 52.5% and 38.3% to 40.7% in the last six years.

    Annapoorani had been streaming on Netflix in multiple regional languages, though it was the Hindi version that sparked an outrage among viewers.

    Expand

  2. 2. Protests by Right-Wing Groups & Social Media Backlash

    Soon after Annapoorani hit the OTT platform, it received widespread backlash on social media, with several viewers labelling the film as “anti-Hindu.” Members of hard-line Hindu organisations also objected to the film, alleging that it “mocks” the Brahmin community and promotes ‘love Jihad’.

    Sharing a clip from the film on X on 9 January, Shriraj Nair, a spokesperson of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP), an outfit of the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS), warned Netflix to take down the film.

    Have a look at his tweet here:

    Sharing the same clip on X, Vinod Bansal, VHP’s national spokesperson also expressed his disapproval of the film and demanded action against it.

    Have a look at his tweet here:

    Nayanthara-starrer 'Annapoorani' has been pulled from Netflix amid the ongoing backlash against the film.

    A screengrab of Vinod Bansal’s tweet.

    According to The Hindu, the VHP’s Mumbai unit also alleged that the film spreads misinformation about revered figures of Hinduism including Lord Rama. “Such content not only has the potential to create social unrest but also reflects a lack of sensitivity towards the sentiments of a significant section of the society,” they said.

    Expand

  3. 3. Legal Complaints Against ‘Annapoorani’

    Amid the uproar on social media, Mumbai police lodged an FIR against the Annapoorani on 6 January, following a complaint by Rakesh Solanki, founder of the Hindu IT Cell.

    The complaint was filed against the film’s lead actors Nayanthara and Jai, writer-director Nilesh Krishnaa, producers Jatin Sethi, R Ravindran, and Punit Goenka, Zee Studios Chief Business Officer Shariq Patel, and the head of Netflix India, Monika Shergill.

    Sharing a copy of the FIR on X, Solanki raised objection over several scenes from the film, including a controversial dialogue, which interpreted Hindu deity Lord Rama, as a meat eater.

    On 10 January, another FIR was lodged against the Nayanthara-starrer by the Jabalpur police under Section 153A (promoting enmity between groups) and 3A of the Indian Penal Code, as per a report by The Hindu.

    Expand

  4. 4. Celebs & Netizens React to the Film’s Removal From Netflix

    Expand

  5. 5. Controversial Scenes From ‘Annapoorani’ Explained

    Nayanthara-starrer 'Annapoorani' has been pulled from Netflix amid the ongoing backlash against the film.

    Nayanthara in a still from the film.

    “Lord Rama, a Meat-Eater”

    In one of the controversial scenes from the film, Farhan tries to convince Annapoorani to eat meat since she wants to participate in a cooking contest. In order to tell her that eating meat is not a sin, Farhan goes on to recite a verse from Valmiki’s Ramayana, which suggests that Lord Rama, Lakshman, and Goddess Sita had consumed meat while they were in exile.

    “The film Promotes Love Jihad”

    In the film, Annapoorani’s Muslim friend, Farhan, encourages her to follow her passion of becoming a celebrated chef. While Farhan develops romantic feelings for Annapoorani, his feelings aren’t reciprocated, leaving their ‘supposed relationship’ that fuelled the “love Jihad” accusations unexplored.

    “Brahmin Woman Offering Namaz to Cook Biryani”

    Annapoorani is the daughter of Rangarajan (Achyuth Kumar), a Brahmin temple chef, who considers meat-eating a sin. During the final round of the cooking contest, the contestants are asked to cook biryani and so Annapoorani does.

    Prior to her preparation, Annapoorani dons a hijab and offers namaz as a tribute to Farhan’s mother, who taught her how to cook Biryani.

    Expand

  6. 6. Zee Studios’ Response to the Controversy

    Amid the controversy, Zee Studios issued a formal apology to the VHP, stating that their film does not intend to hurt the sentiments of the Hindu and Brahmin communities.

    The studio said that it has taken note of the VHP’s allegations about the film containing scenes and dialogues that attribute false and contradictory statements to Lord Rama, suggesting that he had consumed meat during his fourteen years of exile.

    In its apology letter, Zee wrote, “We have no intentions as co-producers of the film to hurt the religious sentiments of the Hindu and Brahmin communities and would like to hereby apologise for the inconvenience caused and hurt caused to the sentiments of the respective communities.”

    Have a look:

    Nayanthara-starrer 'Annapoorani' has been pulled from Netflix amid the ongoing backlash against the film.

    Zee Studios’ apology letter.

    In response to Annapoorani getting pulled from Netflix, VHP spokesperson Vinod Bansal hailed the streamer’s decision as a ‘victory of Hindus’. “On the complaint of the VHP, Zee Studios has apologised. It is important to wake up on time, and it is our compulsion to prevent attacks on the faith of Hindus,” Bansal wrote on X.

    Nayanthara-starrer 'Annapoorani' has been pulled from Netflix amid the ongoing backlash against the film.

    A screengrab of Vinod Bansal’s tweet.

    Zee Studios also stated that Annapoorani will not return to Netflix until the objectionable content is edited out.

    Expand

What is Nayanthara’s ‘Annapoorani’ About? 

Annapoorani, which is co-produced by Zee Entertainment, was released in theatres last year, on 1 December. Although the film opened to mixed reviews from critics, it was a box-office failure and was consequently launched on Netflix after receiving approval from the Censor Board’s Chennai regional office.

Helmed by debutant director Nilesh Krishnaa, Annapoorani follows the story of a Brahmin woman (played by Nayanthara) born into an orthodox family who defies social odds to become India’s best chef.

Farhan (played by Jai), Annapoorani’s classmate and supposed love interest, assists her in navigating the conventional challenges regarding her caste and beliefs and encourages her to go beyond the prejudices to achieve her dream.

Nayanthara-starrer 'Annapoorani' has been pulled from Netflix amid the ongoing backlash against the film.

Nayanthara and Jai in a still from the film.

In the film, Nayanthara’s character is shown going against her family’s religious beliefs by eating and learning to cook meat to enter a high-stakes cooking contest.

In accordance with rigid caste rules, most Brahmins in India do not consume meat.

  • According to a survey conducted by the Pew Research Centre in 2021 among 30,000 Indian adults, most dominant caste Hindus are often vegetarians; however, only 2/5 of the Hindu population is vegetarian in India.

  • Siasat.com, which published a detailed report on the National Family Health Survey 2019-21: Meat Consumption Trends, also pointed out a significant increase in India’s meat consumption from 2015 to present.

  • The report further added that Hindu meat-eaters in India increased from 44.4% to 52.5% and 38.3% to 40.7% in the last six years.

Annapoorani had been streaming on Netflix in multiple regional languages, though it was the Hindi version that sparked an outrage among viewers.

Protests by Right-Wing Groups & Social Media Backlash

Soon after Annapoorani hit the OTT platform, it received widespread backlash on social media, with several viewers labelling the film as “anti-Hindu.” Members of hard-line Hindu organisations also objected to the film, alleging that it “mocks” the Brahmin community and promotes ‘love Jihad’.

Sharing a clip from the film on X on 9 January, Shriraj Nair, a spokesperson of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP), an outfit of the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS), warned Netflix to take down the film.

Have a look at his tweet here:

Sharing the same clip on X, Vinod Bansal, VHP’s national spokesperson also expressed his disapproval of the film and demanded action against it.

Have a look at his tweet here:

Nayanthara-starrer 'Annapoorani' has been pulled from Netflix amid the ongoing backlash against the film.

A screengrab of Vinod Bansal’s tweet.

According to The Hindu, the VHP’s Mumbai unit also alleged that the film spreads misinformation about revered figures of Hinduism including Lord Rama. “Such content not only has the potential to create social unrest but also reflects a lack of sensitivity towards the sentiments of a significant section of the society,” they said.

Legal Complaints Against ‘Annapoorani’

Amid the uproar on social media, Mumbai police lodged an FIR against the Annapoorani on 6 January, following a complaint by Rakesh Solanki, founder of the Hindu IT Cell.

The complaint was filed against the film’s lead actors Nayanthara and Jai, writer-director Nilesh Krishnaa, producers Jatin Sethi, R Ravindran, and Punit Goenka, Zee Studios Chief Business Officer Shariq Patel, and the head of Netflix India, Monika Shergill.

Sharing a copy of the FIR on X, Solanki raised objection over several scenes from the film, including a controversial dialogue, which interpreted Hindu deity Lord Rama, as a meat eater.

On 10 January, another FIR was lodged against the Nayanthara-starrer by the Jabalpur police under Section 153A (promoting enmity between groups) and 3A of the Indian Penal Code, as per a report by The Hindu.

Controversial Scenes From ‘Annapoorani’ Explained

Nayanthara-starrer 'Annapoorani' has been pulled from Netflix amid the ongoing backlash against the film.

Nayanthara in a still from the film.

“Lord Rama, a Meat-Eater”

In one of the controversial scenes from the film, Farhan tries to convince Annapoorani to eat meat since she wants to participate in a cooking contest. In order to tell her that eating meat is not a sin, Farhan goes on to recite a verse from Valmiki’s Ramayana, which suggests that Lord Rama, Lakshman, and Goddess Sita had consumed meat while they were in exile.

“The film Promotes Love Jihad”

In the film, Annapoorani’s Muslim friend, Farhan, encourages her to follow her passion of becoming a celebrated chef. While Farhan develops romantic feelings for Annapoorani, his feelings aren’t reciprocated, leaving their ‘supposed relationship’ that fuelled the “love Jihad” accusations unexplored.

“Brahmin Woman Offering Namaz to Cook Biryani”

Annapoorani is the daughter of Rangarajan (Achyuth Kumar), a Brahmin temple chef, who considers meat-eating a sin. During the final round of the cooking contest, the contestants are asked to cook biryani and so Annapoorani does.

Prior to her preparation, Annapoorani dons a hijab and offers namaz as a tribute to Farhan’s mother, who taught her how to cook Biryani.

Zee Studios’ Response to the Controversy

Amid the controversy, Zee Studios issued a formal apology to the VHP, stating that their film does not intend to hurt the sentiments of the Hindu and Brahmin communities.

The studio said that it has taken note of the VHP’s allegations about the film containing scenes and dialogues that attribute false and contradictory statements to Lord Rama, suggesting that he had consumed meat during his fourteen years of exile.

In its apology letter, Zee wrote, “We have no intentions as co-producers of the film to hurt the religious sentiments of the Hindu and Brahmin communities and would like to hereby apologise for the inconvenience caused and hurt caused to the sentiments of the respective communities.”

Have a look:

Nayanthara-starrer 'Annapoorani' has been pulled from Netflix amid the ongoing backlash against the film.

Zee Studios’ apology letter.

In response to Annapoorani getting pulled from Netflix, VHP spokesperson Vinod Bansal hailed the streamer’s decision as a ‘victory of Hindus’. “On the complaint of the VHP, Zee Studios has apologised. It is important to wake up on time, and it is our compulsion to prevent attacks on the faith of Hindus,” Bansal wrote on X.

Nayanthara-starrer 'Annapoorani' has been pulled from Netflix amid the ongoing backlash against the film.

A screengrab of Vinod Bansal’s tweet.

Zee Studios also stated that Annapoorani will not return to Netflix until the objectionable content is edited out.

Published: 



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Connect Review: Nayanthara Shines Bright In A Dystopian Drama That Thrives In The Dark

Nayanthara in Connect. (courtesy: YouTube)

Cast: Nayanthara, Sathyaraj, Anupam Kher, Vinay Rai

Director: Ashwin Saravanan

Rating: Three stars (out of 5)

A supernatural thriller set in the time of Covid, Ashwin Saravanan’s Connect has its share of jump scares as well as other genre tics. But, if you can tide over the ritualistic babble that it culminates in, it isn’t one of those predictable, hackneyed horror films that merely seek to shock us out of our seats.

The screenplay, authored by the husband-wife writing team of Saravanan and Kaavya Ramkumar, alternates between the sombre and the nightmarish. The impact of the range of feelings that the film arouses is heightened significantly by the steady understated power of the lead performance by Nayanthara.

She shines bright in a dystopian drama that thrives in the dark. She uses her eyes and facial expressions rather than shrieks and squeals to convey fear and foreboding as the unknown creeps up on the sorted and unflappable woman she plays.

Connect, produced by Vignesh Sivan’s Rowdy Pictures and released nationwide in Hindi a week after the original Tamil version hit the screen, weaves into its story of disease, death, divinity and the devil a complement of unsettling twitches that are triggered by a Covid-related tragedy and girl’s response to it.

God and Satan are at war in a world torn asunder by sickness and sorrow. A little girl faces the brunt. A tormented woman fights to save her daughter. A grandfather offers constant advice online. An electronically connected pastor steps in to try and exorcise the evil spirit. Amid all the blather, the film stays firmly focussed on the mother-daughter relationship.

The emotional bond between the two women is thrown into complete disarray by a demonic possession. The script employs the bedevilment as a metaphor for a rampaging, devastating virus. The connect between the two is verbalised by the exorcist himself.

With its loud thuds, persistent knocks on the door, mysterious rumbles, fluttering curtains, flickering lights, eerie shadows in the dark, upturned objects, the works, the 99-minute Connect banks upon all the devices that one would expect in a horror film. Yet it manages to break away at crucial points from the practices ordinarily associated with the spooky business of peddling fear and heightening anxieties.

Connect, which reunites director Saravanan with lead actor Nayanthara after the 2015 neo-noir psychological drama Maya, examines dimensions of loss and grief through an occult phenomenon that that sets off a disquieting chain of events for a quarantining woman, Susan, and her young musician-daughter, Anna.

The pandemic and the lockdown have taken their toll on both. But the nature of the impact on the two isn’t the same. The mother, to begin with, seems completely unperturbed by the crisis that hits her – and the world at large. The daughter, severely distressed, goes into a shell, an act that renders her vulnerable to a Satanic invasion.

Talking of an invasion, the possession of a human by the devil is akin in Connect to a home invasion by a hostile force from another world. Disease is a demon, and vice-versa, and it pushes Anna into an abyss from where only an exorcist can rescue her.

The two women are in separate rooms but the changes that Anna undergoes send ripples not only through the entire house in which they isolate themselves from the world and from each other, but also through the spaces that Susan’s father Arthur (Sathyaraj) and a pastor-exorcist (Anupam Kher) occupy.

Connect is Saravanan’s third directorial venture. He has established himself as a genre filmmaker with a distinct, novel style marked by keen empathy for women fighting off hurtful forces. In Maya, a single mother who works in ad films to make ends meet is haunted by a ghost.

In Game Over (2019), starring Taapsee Pannu, the heroine is a talented game developer grappling with PTSD, a direct consequence of a horrific rape.

In Connect, Saravanan portrays two women – one a mid-career professional in a position of authority, the other a gifted young girl looking forward to making a career as a musician. The latter’s youthful hurry to branch out on her own creates friction between her and her mother, who is firm in her belief that the girl must complete her education before leaving home to pursue her dream.

Saravanan, with the aid of cinematographer Manikantan Krishnamachary, engages visuals, an interplay light and shade, skewed camera angles and movements and sound effects to conjure up an atmosphere of great unease and dread.

The film’s early scenes, which are happy and filled with warmth as the family vacations in Goa, quickly give way to intimations of the dangers up ahead. The pandemic, and the lockdown that it necessitates, yanks Anna’s doting dad, Dr. Joseph Benoy (Vinay Rai), away from the family because the hospital needs him to be on duty 24X7.

The characters from here on are unable to make physical contact with each other. They converse on Zoom calls. The restrictions on physical interactions inevitably lead to unnerving distancing and disorientation. The doctor can connect with his wife and child only through digital means. Anna, the youngest, is the worst affected by the sudden forced separation.

Susan and Anna are suspected to be Covid-positive. As they await their test reports, they isolate within the house while they keep in touch with the girl’s grandfather. Susan and her dad soon begin to feel that something is seriously wrong with Anna. They seek help on her behalf.

Nayanthara stellar performance is supported admirably by Sathyaraj and Anupam Kher. Newcomer Haniya Nafisa, cast in the challenging role of a girl possessed, is no less impressive.

When the confrontation between the devout and the diabolic reaches a crescendo, the pitch of the film is amped up considerably. Connect is never, however, in danger of drowning in shrillness because at all other times, the director does not budge from his controlled and muted methods to tell a story that vacillates between the real and the spectral.

Connect connects with the audience in substantial ways without having to resort to the kind of in-your-face means that horror films usually foist upon the audience.

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