/znkCTx5USFLlDLA7jCntICX7HAU.jpg
ComedyHorror

Yaamirukka Bayamey

-

Kiran gets his dad's property and decides to turn it into a hotel. Intriguingly, all the customers who come to stay there, dies inexplicably. What's happening?

Release Date : 2014-05-09

Language :Tamil

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : R S Infotainment

Production Country : India

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Krishna Kulasekaran

Character Name : Kiran

Original Name : Krishna Kulasekaran

Gender : Male

Rupa Manjari

Character Name : Smitha

Original Name : Rupa Manjari

Gender : Female

Karunakaran

Character Name : Sharath

Original Name : Karunakaran

Gender : Male

Oviya Helen

Character Name : Sharanya

Original Name : Oviya Helen

Gender : Female

Aadhav Kannadasan

Character Name : Thamizh

Original Name : Aadhav Kannadasan

Gender : Male

Anaswara Kumar

Character Name : Mohini

Original Name : Anaswara Kumar

Gender : Female

Nalinikanth

Character Name : Old Thamizh

Original Name : Nalinikanth

Gender : Male

Mayilsamy

Character Name : Adaikalam

Original Name : Mayilsamy

Gender : Male

Bose Venkat

Character Name : Arunachalam

Original Name : Bose Venkat

Gender : Male

Namo Narayanan

Character Name : Hotel Guest

Original Name : Namo Narayanan

Gender : Male

Mahanadhi Shankar

Character Name : Don Durai

Original Name : Mahanadhi Shankar

Gender : Male

Sona Heiden

Character Name : herself

Original Name : Sona Heiden

Gender : Female

Devipriya

Character Name : Arunachalam's wife

Original Name : Devipriya

Gender : Male

Yogi Babu

Character Name : Panni Moonji Vaaya

Original Name : Yogi Babu

Gender : Male

Daniel Annie Pope

Character Name :

Original Name : Daniel Annie Pope

Gender : Male

Balaji Mohan

Character Name : Sathish, Durai's Son

Original Name : Balaji Mohan

Gender : Male

Reviews

T

timesofindia

@timesofindia

2021-06-23

Frankly, most horror films made in Tamil cinema have only ended up as unintentional comedies. Director Deekay seems to understand this and though Yaamirukka Bayamey is a haunted house story, he goes for laughs more than chills. This approach (a very wise one) is what sets his film apart from recent successful films in the genre like Kanchana and Pizza. It is classier than the former and lacks the visual flair of the latter; there is a ghost-looking-for-revenge angle as in Kanchana, and like Pizza, it has some haunted house spooks, but, the film manages to carve its own space as both these tropes are used to generate humour. The initial set-up is definitely tentative. We are introduced to Kiran ( Kreshna, who continues to pick interesting scripts), a schemer, and how he gets into trouble with a local dada Dorai by selling libido enhancement medicine. He comes to know about an ancestral property around the same time and goes to the hill station Kolliyur with his girlfriend Smitha ( Rupa Manjari), only to find that the property is a dilapidated mansion. On the advice of Sharath (Karuna), he refurbish his contact in the place, he refurbishes the place (with the money he windless from Dorai's son) and turns it into a lodge. Intriguingly, the guests who come to stay there start dying. What's the mystery behind the whole thing? Nothing is taken seriously (when every statement made by a character comes true, we don't see others getting shocked but the scene, instead cuts to a dream sequence) or allowed to get too serious (the flashback sequence on ghost), and it could very well have ended up as downright silly (the ghost makeup looks mostly like facial gone bad) but the film somehow manages to keep us amused. A large part of the credit should go to Karuna, who manages to make Sharath both ambivalent and funny. We expect a supernatural reason behind everyone exclaiming that Sharath looks familiar and what we get is a sly and funny explanation. On the other hand, both the heroines are clearly there for oomph. The horror genre's mandatory elements are all here — mansion in a lonely place, mysterious old man, mysticism, and even the quintessential dim lighting in the night scenes — but Deekay nicely subverts some of these cliches (we think we are getting the ghost's story during the flashback, but that isn't so). Also, he doesn't try to spoof the genre's tropes to elicit laughs but chooses to bring out the humour in other ways. It is this confidence that makes the film work.