Critics Review
2.25
Novel Intent Executed in a Tiring Manner!
A template commercial saga which has the Robinhood trope with an emotional backstory. The difference is, the majority of elements don�t click here, Gautham Menon�s investigation angle and the political portions are the saviour.(more)
Source: Ashwin Ram, MovieCrow
2.50
A Revenge Drama That Fails To Weaponise The Twists
The intentions behind Dana�s writing gets a powerful depiction through such shots and dialogues. However, given the predictability, there�s very little excitement about what's next. So even when the story has all the right elements for a revenge drama, the film is never compelling enough.(more)
Source: Harshini, Times Of India
2.25
Vijay Antony's revenge drama is outdated and ordinary
The haphazardly-written Hitler lacks the gripping social narrative Dana�s directorial debut Padaiveeran had or the heart and emotional beats his Vaanam Kottattumoffered, though the story lends itself well to both attributes. Instead, what we get is a watered-down vigilante actioner that neither astounds nor entertains. The tyrant dictator Hitler might have made propaganda films to push his evil agenda, but this Hitler leaves us wishing it had some agenda we could salute.(more)
Source: GOPINATH RAJENDRAN, The Hindu
2.00
A promising revenge drama watered down by a lack of intrigue
Hitler just ends up being a disappointing commentary on dictatorship that is just a gimmick, very much like the title. As the credits rolled, I was plagued by the biggest question of them all� Why unnecessarily play the cards too close to the chest when you are showing the audience the face of the cards right from the time of arranging them in order. Why?(more)
Source: Avinesh , Indian Express
2.50
This thriller is neither original nor engaging
The film�s ideas about dictatorship have potential but are explored very superficially. In a film that could�ve dissected the horrors of dictatorship, Hitler ironically subjects us to the tyranny of cliches.(more)
Source: Jayabhuvaneshwari B , The New Indian Express