Silencer speaks thru the isolated Mookodan Eenasu, no matter his spouse and son having a massive residence and luxuries. The movie suggests that even though the Industrial Revolution and innovations have been for the help of man, it tainted his views and values. Eenasu’s father used to run a bicycle repair shop. Eenasu’s assets are the beliefs and work instilled by his very own father, whom Eenasu calls Gandhian comrade. After his father’s death, Eenasu took over the bicycle repair shop. But Eenasu’s son Sunny is no longer involved in any of it.
Einasu, who follows the beliefs and values instilled by his father, is unable to adapt to his son’s new age attitudes. The son is a established businessman in the town today. Eenasu says the cash he makes smells of alcohol and blood. The silencer depicts no longer solely the altering tastes of the older era and the more recent technology and its inconsistencies, however additionally the conflicts of existence and social realities.
Eenasu’s childhood companion is an old Rajdoot bike. He has cut off its silencer in protest of his son. He would ride his bike around the city. It’s not just a protest against the son, it’s a protest against the cruel world.
Lal has done a great job as the central character of Mookodan Eenasu. Mookodan Eenasu is another great character in Lal‘s career who has graced a handful of great roles. Lal has shocked the audience by the performance in some places. Meera Vasudev plays Theresia, the wife of Mukodan Eenasu. Irshad is the son Sunny. Irshad and Meera have done their characters 100 percent justice. Mookodan Porinchu is presented by Art Director Salu K. George. Even those who came in small roles performed well in the film.
The sound effect of the film is handled by Arun Rama Varma. The music is provided by Bijibal. Bijibal’s music has been able to convey the feel of many scenes to the audience. Priyanandan’s son Ashwajit is the cinematographer of Silencer. The camera captures the mental trade-offs of the characters more than the visuals.
Priyanandan presents the topic in general discussion today without losing its seriousness. The film, which is only an hour and a half long, does not test the audience’s patience. Silencer conveys its politics to the audience without even a single unnecessary shot. Vaishakh’s story is scripted by P.N Gopikrishnan. Silencer is a serious film that demands a theatrical viewing experience.