Yes, even at 70, he does everything that we expect to see him do on screen, including sending a dozen men flying. But there’s one villain whom even Rajinikanth cannot vanquish — bad writing! And in Annaatthe, this villain is just too strong. The story revolves around panchayat president Kaalaiyan (Rajinikanth), fondly addressed as Annaatthe by everyone around him, and his sister Thanga Meenatchi (Keerthy Suresh, who seems to be auditioning for the sad face smiley in an emoji movie). They dote on each other like crazy. How do we know that? We are told so. In an early scene, we see Kaalayian taking home Meenatchi, who has just returned after completing her studies in Kolkata, in a car. An old woman mentions how sad the brother was without his sister, and Meenatchi immediately gets all sentimental, and we get a flashback about a mother dying during childbirth and a brother taking on the mother’s duties and looking after his sister. Yes, the writing is that generic.
Then, Kaalaiyan decides to arrange a match for his sister . Why? Just because a couple of old women ask him when he is going to get her married! But then, he wants his sister to be within a 5km radius, so that he can go to her help whenever she calls him. And when an alliance comes their way (the groom is a doctor), Kaalaiyan agrees to it. Why? Even if his sister marries a multi-millionaire, she will anyway have to go to a doctor, so why not get a doctor as the groom? No, this is not mentioned in a playful manner, like in the scenes preceding it, when grooms say no to the man because of his violent ways, but in a very straight-faced manner. Frankly, this moment is comedy gold compared to those supposedly funny scenes.
Meanwhile, fate intervenes and the brother and sister are estranged. He tracks her down to Kolkata, where he witnesses her in deep trouble. With Meenatchi not wanting to let her brother see her in such a state, Kaalaiyan decides to go after the man who has made his sister’s life miserable.
If Petta felt like a pastiche of Rajinikanth’s films, Annaatthe seems like a collage made out of the weaker moments from director Siva’s filmography. We have the villains from Siruthai, the ‘saviour who cannot reveal his identity’ angle from Veeram, the brother-sister sentiment from Vedalam, and the rural backdrop from Viswasam. The result is a movie whose emotional beats feel blatantly calculated and manipulative.