Njan Steve Lopez

From Bharatpedia, an open encyclopedia
Information red.svg
Scan the QR code to donate via UPI
Dear reader, We need your support to keep the flame of knowledge burning bright! Our hosting server bill is due on June 1st, and without your help, Bharatpedia faces the risk of shutdown. We've come a long way together in exploring and celebrating our rich heritage. Now, let's unite to ensure Bharatpedia continues to be a beacon of knowledge for generations to come. Every contribution, big or small, makes a difference. Together, let's preserve and share the essence of Bharat.

Thank you for being part of the Bharatpedia family!
Please scan the QR code on the right to donate.

0%

   

transparency: ₹0 raised out of ₹100,000 (0 supporter)


Njan Steve Lopez
File:Njan Steve Lopez Standy.jpg
Poster of the film Njan Steve Lopez
Directed byRajeev Ravi
Produced byMadhu Neelakandan
Alan McAlex
Madhukar R. Musle
Screenplay byRajesh Ravi
Santhosh Echikkanam
Geethu Mohandas
Story byRajeev Ravi
Starring
Music bySongs:
Shahabaz Aman
Background score:
Chandran Veyattummal
Govind Vasantha
CinematographyPappu
Edited byB. Ajithkumar
Distributed byE4 Entertainment
Release date
  • 8 August 2014 (2014-08-08)
Running time
116 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageMalayalam

Njan Steve Lopez (English: I am Steve Lopez) is a 2014 Indian Malayalam-language mystery crime film, directed by Rajeev Ravi. The production is also supported by Jar Pictures, M.R Filmworks and Media Mill. The film is set in Thiruvananthapuram city and It stars Farhaan Faasil and Ahaana Krishna in lead roles. It was their debut movie as hero and heroine.

Plot[edit]

Steve (Farhaan Faasil) is a college kid whose major concern in life is how to tell his childhood friend Anjali (Ahaana Krishna) that he loves her. He has an iPhone, is on WhatsApp all the time, goes out drinking with his friends and generally lives a carefree life made all the more secure by the fact that Steve's father George is a Deputy Superintendent of Police in Thiruvananthapuram.

This idyll is smashed when one day, Steve witnesses a stranger being attacked by men with scythes. Steve isn't able to stop them, but when the attackers leave their victim for dead, Steve takes the injured man to the hospital.

It's here that he realizes there is more than what meets the eye. The man he helped is from a criminal gang and it's evident that George is very unhappy that his son has got mixed up in all this.

Steve's misgivings intensify when he's called to the police station to identify the attackers in a lineup and none of the men he'd seen are in that lineup.

On his way back from the police station, Steve spots one of the scythe-wielding men in a car and decides to follow him. The man whom Steve is following, Hari (Sujit Shankar), seems to be unaware of the college kid tailing him, but of course, that's not really the case. Two of Hari's men knock out Steve. When he comes to his senses, Steve finds himself bound and gagged in a room that overlooks Hari's home. Things become murkier when Hari says he's going to let Steve go and Steve realizes that Hari knows his father.

All Steve wants to do is the right and humane thing by the people he encounters, but his acts of kindness just serve to muddle up the situation he's in terribly. Steve realises George and the police force are somehow involved with the gangs and are playing sides, possibly to maintain a peaceful status quo. However, no matter how many times Steve asks, George won't explain to his son precisely how the police are handling the situations.

Inevitably, Steve realises that the bad guys have human sides and the police have terrible secrets, but no one has answers to the questions that Steve has. The more he investigates this case in which he has unwittingly become a critical pawn, the more dangerous things turn for him. Aside from Steve, no one seems blameless and yet, he is the one who seems to be suffering the most. Although some of the sequences, like the one in which Steve follows Hari home, can feel a little tedious, the film's tension is sustained by the mystery of how the police are connected to the gangs and whether Steve will be able to find answers to the questions his father refuses to even acknowledge.

Cast[edit]

Music[edit]

Njan Steve Lopez
Film score by
Released13 July 2014 (2014-07-13)
GenreFeature film soundtrack
Length19:16
LabelMy Studio
ProducerShahabaz Aman, Chandran Veyattummal

The film score was composed by Chandran Veyattummal and Govind Vasantha (formerly Govind Menon). The songs were composed by Shahabaz Aman and released on 13 July 2014. Chandran Veyattummal also composed the song "Pokaruthen Makane" for the film, which is extracted from the oral text of Iravikutti Pilla Poru.

Track listing
No.TitleLyricsSinger(s)Length
1."Theruvukal"Anwar AliSiddharth Menon5:14
2."Muthu Penne"TraditionalJassie Gift2:48
3."Pokaruthen Makane"From the oral text of Iravikutti Pilla Poru (Research: Anwar Ali)Jensy Gregory3:42
4."Chirakukal Njan"Anwar AliParvathy Jayadevan4:23
5."Oorake Kalapila"Anwar Ali, Anoop Mohandas, Rahul MadhusudanAnwar Ali, Anoop Mohandas, Ramesh Ram, Vishnu Dethan, Ben Sam Jones3:49
Total length:19:16

Online release[edit]

The movie was released online on Reelmonk.com to a worldwide audience on 20 July 2015. However, the day of the online release the movie suffered from piracy attacks and was uploaded to torrent sites. The online release partner, Reelmonk, was, however, able to track the uploader within 12 minutes and has initiated criminal proceedings against the pirate.[2]

Reception[edit]

The film was very well received by critics like Baradwaj Rangan. But the lack of commercialization made it a failure in the box office. It had since gone through a series of festival circuits gaining more critical acclaim. Finding audience online, now the film has a cult following and is considered Rajeev Ravi's best work among his three films.

References[edit]

External links[edit]