![]() ![]() We see Venu fighting a lone battle against the big fish in his effort to do business ethically and wholeheartedly. The whole of the second half is devoted to this. This time he trains his guns on the blade banks or non-banking financial companies that fleece the common man by lending money at an exorbitant rate of interest and taking families to the brink of suicide. Ranjith Sankar has made a name for himself by delivering a social message through his films. But Venu resurrects his life with the aim of a greater common good in mind. Venu and Nandini’s world falls apart when their son dies. The aspirations of a newly-rich nuclear family and their eagerness to show that they are upwardly mobile, gives the feel of a Sathyan Anthikkad film. The director, who has also written the script, takes time to set up the milieu. The husband and wife keep fighting, but they have a common dream for their son: that he should become a doctor. She wants her son to be good in everything that her neighbour's son does. His wife Nandini (Asha Sarath) shares similar characteristics. ![]() He is a cocky businessman for whom the line between right and wrong is blurred. The company is in the name of his teenage son Anand (Prajwal Prasad). Venu (Mammootty) runs a small finance and gold loan company, which is called a blade bank in local parlance. ![]()
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