Download Keedam (2022) full movie in Dual Audio Hindi 720p 480p Keedam movie download tamilrocker

 


Download Keedam (2022) full movie in Dual Audio Hindi 720p 480p 





Keedam (2022) HDRip Dual Audio In Hindi Malayalam







                           Movie info




IMDB Ratings: 6.4/10
Director: Rahul Riji Nair
Genre: Crime, Thriller
Release date: 20 May 2022
Language: Hindi (ORG), Malayalam
Quality: 1080p | 720p | 480p WEB-DL
Movie Cast: Rajisha Vijayan, Sreenivasan, Vijay Babu




                              Movie Story: 



Radhika Balan, a smart cyber-security expert, advocates the use of technology for the good but her life is turned upside down when she falls prey to a cyber-stalking incident and her privacy gets compromised.


                         

                                Screenshot



Keedam (2022) HDRip Dual Audio In Hindi Malayalam




Download Keedam (2022) Full Movie 720p [980MB]






Download Keedam (2022) Full Movie 480p [350MB]














       



Keedam Movie review and Cast


KEEDAM CREW

DirectorRahul Riji Nair
ScreenplayRahul Riji Nair
CinematographyRakesh Dharan
MusicSidhartha Pradeep
ProducerLijo Joseph
BudgetTBA
Box OfficeTBA
OTT PlatformTBA
OTT Release DateTBA




What does a predator do when his potential prey turns on him? The keedam (pest) of the title is not who you might assume it is at first glance. 

The film works on many fronts. The technical language used and the processes followed are neither indecipherable nor apparently dumbed down, but sound plausible to an inexpert ear.

The scenes unveiling the gravity of the threat to Radhika are chilling. The narrative trots along with new developments coming at us at a steady pace. An extended chase and fight scene involving the police and gangsters is played to sound design more realistic than the usual biff-bang-dishoom-dishoom that action thrillers rely on and stunt choreography more believable than the standard larger-than-life fare. 

Radhika’s somewhat risky behaviour at a certain point is not glorified or (with her gender in mind) viewed through a judgemental lens. Her conduct is depicted as a natural progression of responses to a challenging scenario, the sort of foolhardiness brave people sometimes exhibit.




Sreenivasan really kills it as a worried parent in Keedam, especially with that stand-out heart-wrenching scene in which Balan confides in Radhika. Rajisha never once strays from her pitch as a feisty genius who is not, however, Wonder Woman.

Violence against women, online harassment and its offline perils are recurring topics in Rahul Riji Nair’s works. Nair debuted with the excellent Ottamuri Velicham (The Light in the Room, 2017) about a physically abusive husband and a timid new bride in a sparsely inhabited, high-altitude countryside. His Kalla Nottam (The False Eye, 2019) was about illegal surveillance, voyeurs and self-appointed moral police. 

While Keedam makes for interesting viewing, it does not match up to Nair’s maiden venture. Part of the reason is an absence of the rootedness he once captured so well. In Ottamuri Velicham, the smell of the pure mountain air and the soil of that treacherous landscape almost wafted off the screen. In Keedam, he seems to be striving for an Anyplace Everyplace feel, which is rarely a good thing.  

This aim is underlined by the inexplicable use of Hindi lines in the film’s soundtrack. . The choice of language has no contextual relevance, and has the effect of dragging Keedam down into a sort of cultural limbo. Malayalam filmmakers need to stop unthinkingly shoving Hindi and English lines into their scripts and songs. (For more on that, click here and here.)

In this and other ways, Keedam does not live up to its promise. Still, the overall narrative flow, the acting, the timeliness of the socially important premise and the consistent centrality of Radhika in the plot even while other characters are given sufficient space and substance make it worthwhile. In an impressive supporting cast, watch out for Renjit Shekar Nair who played the sweet, simple village school employee with a bobbing head in Kho Kho, and for this film has transformed himself into a menacing, physically intimidating villain. His role in Keedam could easily have been over-done and hammed, but there’s a line he is careful not to cross.

Tech-based films are not common in Malayalam, but like 2021’s Operation Java, Keedam too seems at home with its chosen subject. The thriller aspect keeps the film going, but what helps it rise above the simplistic take on its theme is the heartening manner in which it re-imagines the representation of the father-daughter bond and overturns cinema’s man-as-protector trope