Indrans' acting prowess needs no explanation.
For some time now he has been getting serious roles with gravitas. However, in Gramavasees we see him go back to a comic role, but not without some meat to it. Indrans and Azeez Nedumangad share screen space navigating the story doing what they do best, create comedy. And with Gramavasees, the director B N Shajeer Sha is saying too many stories at once.
Madhavan and his brother-in-law Kovalan are thick friends, alcoholics and hence troublemakers. When they realise that their drunken antics are causing Madhavan's son Praveen a lot of distress, they decide to abstain from alcohol till he is married. But his marriage proves to be difficult because Praveen is uneducated. So his family and friends suggest a love marriage. A mute orphan girl walks into his life and it changes everything.
'Gramavasees' is a comedy sketch stretched to a feature film with song and dance. The comedy is heavy on sexual innuendos and is crass to the best. The cinematography is a visual treat and so are the songs. But too many plots being told all at once goes in all tangents. The plotline goes in random directions so much so that the first half concludes not because it's a critical point of the story, but because it's time.