After an easy, non-eventful former half, the film pulls out a present-day social issue out of its backpack and does a pretty okay job at brandishing it without much of a fuss. After an easy, non-eventful former half, the film pulls out a present-day social issue out of its backpack and does a pretty okay job at brandishing it without much of a fuss. A demure looking boy with a charming spirit, Azad is quick to win over hearts and very soon emerges the darling of the senior gang. The seniors led by Anand Asif Ali have been around for quite a while, and is a merry making bunch that comprises of loyal luck pursuers at the exams Sreenath Bhasi and Deepak Parambol and ones Saiju Kurup who have even after completion of the course, stuck around the college premises, on the lookout for a job that never seems to come by. The initial first hour of the film that has a running time of two hours and twenty six minutes is spent on what most campus films indulge in — mindless gang wars, messed up stage performances, tricky love affairs and what not. But by then, Azad has made his appearance and has settled down comfily beside you, his arm thrown around your shoulder. With a toothy grin that he flashes every now and then, and the few words that btech malayalam movie softly utters, the boy is one whom you btech malayalam movie to reach a hand out to; the one whom you want to btech malayalam movie a good, happy life ahead. There is however the casualness with which the film deals with the means that the youngsters adopt to make some quick money that is appalling. They take to forging documents, issuing fake certificates and all possible identification cards, and no one -not even the older ones — feels anything odd about it. It takes the flustered lawyer-dad Anoop Menon at the end of it all, to drive some sense into these old-enough, yet gullible heads. It is far from a perfect piece, but an honest effort that without doubt has its share of memorable moments.