The title card of Thinkalazhcha Nishchayam, overflowing pride for the spot in which the film is immovably set and summoning in the watcher an expectation for something novel. The center story, described as a joke, may figure out how to summon just weak interest; throughout the long term, we have seen and heard numerous an anecdote about ladies who are constrained into relationships against their desires and concocting ways of wriggling out of the proposition. Yet, how you decide to recount a story and what you let the characters do, can have a significant effect, which is the thing that chief Senna Hegde accomplishes here.
Suja (Anagha Narayanan), the hero of Thinkalazhcha who is being compelled to get hitched to an NRI, has an additional weight as well. Her dad Vijayan (Manoj KU) is as yet living with the ‘disgrace’ of his senior little girl Surabhi (Unnimaya Nalappadam) getting hitched to somebody of her decision, dismissing the proposition from a cousin, who likewise turns out to be monetarily in an ideal situation. Vijayan has along these lines, unloaded every one of his expectations on Suja, to make up for himself among the judgemental more distant family and the bigger society. However, Suja unmistakably has different plans.
Her funny ‘penny kaanal’ scene with the musically challenged NRI man establishes the vibe for the remainder of the film, which is loaded with such minutes. Every one of her thoroughly examined answers to his pre-arranged rundown of inquiries, intended to drive him off, just figure out how to bring out the contrary impact in him. The commitment is well and on, and it needs to happen soon, as the man needs to return abroad to his work. Time is expiring for Suja, and her beau is no place to be seen.
Chief Hegde carries specific creativity and validness to the procedures on-screen, which isn’t simply because of the settings and lingo of Kasargod (which have just sparse portrayal in Malayalam film). He appears to have a capacity to compose scenes that draw out the relationship elements and fundamental pressures between any arrangement of characters. This is very clear in the scenes after the appearance of the different arrangements of family members in the family in front of the commitment, particularly the manners by which Surabhi’s cousin (played by Sajin Cherukayil) endeavors to curry favor with her dad, even while showing open disdain for her better half.
While a large part of the focal point of the film is on a lady battling to go to bat for her decision, it additionally doesn’t remove its eyes from the dad, who now and again acts like a despot inside the family, even while quietly fleeing from somebody who acquired his cash. A larger part of the cast is new, yet the vast majority of them perform like prepared veterans.
With Thinkalazhcha Nishchayam, Senna Hegde shows that no story is flat, on the off chance that you find novel and imaginative methods of describing it.