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Kee: Directed by Kalees. With Jiiva, Nikki Galrani, Anaika Soti, Govind Padmasoorya. A man falls in love with a girl and tries to impress her. However, their life takes a serious turn when they fall victim to cyber-bullying.

“Kee, written and directed by Kalees, similarly to Irumbu Thirai takes on an important problem of the digital world. Itu0026#39;s about a young hacker getting in trouble with a more dangerous hacker gang.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe plot itself and the conflict for our protagonist Siddharth werenu0026#39;t bad at all. But the lack of understanding of this topic by the director and the length of unnecessary content ruined this potential.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eSo whatu0026#39;s good about this movie? Basically a little bit of the intention. Cinematography and the background score were fine. And we canu0026#39;t forget the amazing VFX-composition. Shouldnu0026#39;t have been necessary, but they did a great job there.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eSo whatu0026#39;s bad about this movie? Unnecessary and predictable side-stories. Since weu0026#39;ve seen good performances from this cast, this is rather an over-direction. The only difference-maker between comedy and drama was the music. And the biggest negative point is that while this movie tries to make people aware of the threats in our digitally networking world, this movie only proves to not understand anything itself. Irumbu Thirai at least provided a basic understanding of its themes. In this case it seems like the writer didnu0026#39;t event research at all.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThis movie fails to deliver an image of the dangers in our modern world. Unfortunately it fails to be a entertaining movie, too.”

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