
Wait, what about Hema (Meera Jasmine), the loosu ponnu in the first film? The point of writing stereotypical heroine roles is to allow the filmmakers to replace them easily. Balu immediately falls for Sembaruthi’s loosu ponnu charms. She is prone to doing all the bizarre things right when the hero looks at her. Keerthy Suresh plays the ‘loosu ponnu’, aka quintessential heroine of Tamil cinema, called Sembaruthi. But he continues to be a foolish gangster who comes to Madurai without doing a proper background check on his targets. He is now settled in Andhra Pradesh and dresses diffidently.

The fearsome villain gets a comical treatment in the sequel. Linguswamy has even included a throwback scene to the first Sandakozhi by bringing back Kasi. The crowd move like zombies around the action scene and don’t even contribute to the scene as a mute spectator. He sends his enemies flying in the air but surprisingly no single living soul in the carnival notices the fight. In an action sequence, Balu beats up his rivals in a crowded carnival saving Anbu. The next two hours Pechi tries to kill Anbu and Balu saves Anbu.

In other words, Anbu is spared so that director has something to work on.īalu enters the picture just in time so that he can add muscle to his father’s stable, which is already overflowing with machismo. She almost succeeds but Durai (Rajkiran) saves Anbu (Johny Hari). She vows not to allow celebrations in peace until she avenges her husband by killing all men in the family of the man that killed her husband. The celebrations have not taken place in the village because of the gang-led by Pechi (Varalaxmi Sarathkumar), whose husband was killed during the same festival seven years.
