Driver Jamuna

2022 Tamil language thriller film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Driver Jamuna

Driver Jamuna is a 2022 Indian Tamil-language thriller film directed by P. Kinslin and starring Aishwarya Rajesh, Aadukalam Naren and Kavitha Bharathi in the lead roles. It was released on 30 December 2022. The film started streaming on aha from 20 January 2023.

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Driver Jamuna
Thumb
Theatrical release poster
Directed byP. Kinslin
Produced byS. P. Chowthari
Starring
CinematographyGokul Benoy
Edited byR. Ramar
Music byGhibran
Production
company
18 Reels
Release date
  • 30 December 2022 (2022-12-30)
Running time
103 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTamil
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Plot

Jamuna (Aishwarya Rajesh) is a cab driver, who happens to take a shared ride with a musician (Abishek Kumar) and three other men travelling to a wedding. But as it turns out, the three passengers are contract killers en route to take down an ex-MLA. Caught between the goons and police, Jamuna tries to survive and also save the killers' target.

Social media star and comedian Abhishek Kumar plays the ambitious musician.

Cast

Production

The film was officially announced in January 2021, coinciding with Aishwarya Rajesh's birthday. Touted to be a "crime thriller", production began by March 2021 with Kinslin of Vathikuchi (2013) fame, making his return as director.[1] To incorporate their body language into her character, Aishwarya Rajesh met many taxi drivers during her research for the film.[2]

Release

The film was theatrically released on 30 December 2022 across Tamil Nadu, alongside a Telugu dubbed version. The film started streaming on aha from 20 January 2023 while the film's satellite rights were brought by Kalaignar TV.

Reception

The film opened to mixed reviews; while Aishwarya Rajesh's performance received positive reviews, the film received criticism for its writing.

A reviewer from Times of India noted "Aishwarya Rajesh tries her best to save this hastily written road thriller" adding that "Driver Jamuna has engaging moments, but it's definitely not the road movie one would willingly opt for".[3] A reviewer from The New Indian Express noted "the Aishwarya Rajesh-starrer is all over the place all at once" adding that "the earnestness of the filmmaker's vision probably withered away due to a lack of focused writing and prosaic filmmaking techniques".[4] The Hindustan Times wrote "for a thriller, it reserves most of its thrills for the last 10 minutes, and that’s a move that may not appeal to everybody", while India Today noted the "lacklustre film that suffers from logical loopholes".[5][6]

References

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