Storyline
the life of Indian immigrant Najeeb Muhammad, who vanished in Saudi Arabia. Working in the Persian Gulf states and making enough money to send home was Najeeb's goal. However, after realizing his dream, a string of unfortunate events forces him to live a life akin to a slave, herding goats in the middle of the Saudi desert. Ultimately, Najeeb devises a risky plan to break free from his desert jail.
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Tamil
Aadujeevitham - The Goat Life (2024) Tamil HQ PreDVD - 1080p - x264 - HQ Clean Audio - MP3 - 3GB :Download
Aadujeevitham - The Goat Life (2024) Tamil HQ PreDVD - 720p - x264 - HQ Clean Audio - MP3 - 1.7GBDownload
Aadujeevitham - The Goat Life (2024) Tamil HQ PreDVD - 700MB - x264 - HQ Clean Audio - MP3 :Download
Malayalam
Aadujeevitham - The Goat Life (2024) Malayalam HQ PreDVD - 1080p - x264 - HQ Clean Audio - MP3 - 3GB :Download
Aadujeevitham - The Goat Life (2024) Malayalam HQ PreDVD - 720p - x264 - HQ Clean Audio - MP3 - 1.7GB :Download
Aadujeevitham - The Goat Life (2024) Malayalam HQ PreDVD - 700MB - x264 - HQ Clean Audio - MP3 :Download
Telugu
Aadujeevitham - The Goat Life (2024) Telugu HQ PreDVD - 1080p - x264 - HQ Clean Audio - MP3 - 2.8GB :Download
Aadujeevitham - The Goat Life (2024) Telugu HQ PreDVD - 720p - x264 - HQ Clean Audio - MP3 - 1.6GBDownload
Aadujeevitham - The Goat Life (2024) Telugu HQ PreDVD - 700MB - x264 - HQ Clean Audio - MP3 :Download
The premise
When Najeeb (Prithviraj Sukumaran) chooses to work in the Gulf to provide a better life for his family, he is content with his happy life in Kerala with his wife Saini (Amala Paul). After landing in Saudi Arabia with his companion Hakim, he is brought to an unidentified location with a local man they believe to be their boss. Najeeb is left with a local farmer in the middle of the desert and is cut off from the outer world. His pathetic attempts to converse with Kafeel, the supervisor, in Malayalam are fruitless.
In the midst of the desert, he finds himself a slave herding goats. He is provided with little food and almost no water, and he is frantic to get out and return home. Days turn into weeks, months, and even years. How can Najeeb escape this terrible life of forced labor and enslavement to return home? Here's where Hakim and Ibrahim Khadiri (Jimmy Jean-Louis) enter the picture. The remainder of The Goat Life's plot is revealed in what follows.
What works
Although it was a difficult tale to bring to life on screen, director Blessy did a fantastic job at it. He takes his time telling Najeeb's story, allowing you to follow every development as he adjusts to his new existence. Through the striking pictures, the shift of a happy and healthy Najeeb swimming freely in the backwaters of Kerala to a famished, desperately thin, and unkempt one in the desert among rocky goats, is beautifully conveyed.
Najeeb expresses all of his emotions through minute details, such as the interaction he has with the baby goat or his farewell to the goats. For the most part of the first part, there is only the vastness of the desert, the goat herd, and a suffering Najeeb. Blessy pulls out the relationship between the three in a painful way; one can never truly understand the suffering that the actual Najeeb must have endured. Blessy shifts in the second half to focus on Najeeb and Hakim's difficult and nearly impossible trek to liberation.
There are numerous memorable scenes.
As Najeeb, Prithviraj Sukumaran gave a remarkable performance. His dedication to the role of Najeeb is commendable, as he has truly immersed himself in it. From his shaggy beard, black teeth, and unclean nails to his weight loss, the Malayalam actor has demonstrated that he has sacrificed all for this part.
Numerous scenes are particularly noteworthy and demonstrate how no other actor could have played this part. For example, the scene where he's so thin that he walks to the water tank naked to take a bath after all these years really gets under your skin. The performances of Jimmy Jean-Louis, Talib (Kafeel), and KR Gokul (Hakim) are particularly noteworthy, and Amala Paul, who merely has a few scenes, accomplishes the necessary.
Technically speaking, Sunil KS did an excellent job as the cinematographer; his images are incredibly vibrant and effectively capture and portray the mood of every step of Najeeb's journey. You can see Najeeb's thirst, for example, and when he slakes it, you find yourself wanting to sip water as well.
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