

The Premam gang - Siju Wilson, Sharafuddin and Krishna Sankar - enacts their roles perfectly without going overboard. Srinda Arhaan, Saiju Kurup (the classic Newton’s Third Law scene) and Dileesh Pothen added to the hilarity. Antony made the best use of his screen time. In a full-length hilarious role, Maheshinte Prathikaram-fame K.L. Ahaana Krishnan as the phone-obsessed Sarah gives a few relatable moments, especially during the mother-daughter, brother-sister conversations. The scene in which he explains the Gulf War to his sisters is a gem, for he handles it with charm, keeping it subtle.

Nivin’s London-returned Kurien reminds you of most of his earlier characters - the lazy, childish, irresponsible guy who rises to the occasion when the time comes for him to act. She remains the show-stealer in her comeback movie. Shanthi Krishna, as the mature, strong and gritty college professor Sheela, delivers a realistic performance as the fierce warrior - the heroine. He puts up a great show as the pigeon-hearted father who always worries over every trivial issue.
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Lal excels as the faint-hearted and insecure Chacko (Lal) who barely knows how to handle the war with the ‘army of crabs’. The makers have succeeded in making the audience part of the family. The movie revolves around a family whose life topples one fine morning following a ‘small doubt’. There are no surprises or goosebump moments - either in the story or the performance, but here is a movie you would love for its simplicity and genuineness. A laugh riot with its own share of memorable and touching moments, the movie maintains the underlying gravity of the story amid the spectacular presentation. How an upper middle class family deals with a crisis is portrayed in a never-before-seen manner with situational humour that never crosses the limits of decency.
