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Guild Reviews

Image of scene from the film Kennedy
FCG Rating for the film Kennedy: 58/100
Kennedy

Crime, Thriller (Hindi)

An insomniac former cop, Kennedy has been presumed dead for years. Yet, in secret, he continues to serve a corrupt system while seeking redemption. Halfway between thriller and film noir, Kennedy chronicles a violent and bloody vendetta in the dark streets of Mumbai. At the rate of the murders, Kennedy's character reveals itself more and more and sinks into a spiral that seems to have no way out.

Cast: Rahul Bhat, Sunny Leone, Mohit Takalkar, Megha Burman, Haripriya Manish Lodhia, Shrikant Yadav, Abhilash Thapliyal, Jeniffer Piccinato, Benedict Garrett, Aamir Dalvi
Director: Anurag Kashyap


FCG Member Reviewer Anuj Kumar
Anuj Kumar | The Hindu
Rahul Bhat powers this haunting meditation on systemic rot and redemption

Sat, February 21 2026

Anurag Kashyap returns to his raw, uncompromising ways with a ticking-time-bomb of a film that rewards patience

Before the curtain rises on Anurag Kashyap’s latest noirish adventure, William Wordsworth’s famous words, “We poets in our youth begin in gladness; but thereof come in the end despondency and madness”, flash on the screen. This struggle between resolution and independence holds for both Kashyap and Kennedy.

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FCG Member Reviewer Poulomi Das
Poulomi Das | The Federal
Rahul Bhat-led revenge thriller shows flashes of vintage Anurag Kashyap

Sat, February 21 2026

Vintage Kashyap surfaces in bursts of violent musicality and nocturnal mood in Kennedy. The plot, however, lingers a step behind the filmmaking. The result is a stylish revenge thriller that fails to meet its gaps.

About an hour into Kennedy, writer-director Anurag Kashyap springs a sequence so wickedly orchestrated that it alters the film’s grammar in an instant. In the scene, former cop Uday Shetty (Rahul Bhat) massacres a local politician and his family. The violence is merciless, yet staged with such choreographic precision — pauses, glances, the geometry of bodies collapsing across rooms — that it lands as shockingly comic as it is brutal.

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FCG Member Reviewer Deepak Dua
Deepak Dua | Independent Film Journalist & Critic
अंधेरी रातों में सुनसान राहों पर ‘कैनेडी’

Fri, February 20 2026

‘हम कवि अपनी जवानी की शुरुआत खुशी से करते हैं, लेकिन आखिर में निराशा और पागलपन आ जाता है।’ इंगलिश कवि विलियम वर्ड्सवर्थ की इन पंक्तियों से शुरू होने वाली अनुराग कश्यप की फिल्म ‘कैनेडी’ बहुत जल्द इन पंक्तियों के अर्थ को बयान करने में लग जाती है। 2020-21 की कोरोना महामारी के समय में स्थित इस फिल्म ‘कैनेडी’ (Kennedy) का केंद्रीय पात्र कैनेडी कभी एक पुलिस वाला उदय शैट्टी हुआ करता था जो शहर के भ्रष्ट पुलिस कमिश्नर की टीम में था। अब भी वह कमिश्नर के कहने पर लोगों को मार रहा है, उनसे उगाही कर रहा है। लेकिन जिस काम को कभी वह खुशी से करता था अब उसी को निराशा और पागलपन से कर रहा है। सिर्फ कुछ रातों की इस कहानी की शुरुआत में ही उदय शैट्टी बता देता है कि पिछले छह सालों में उसने अनगिनत लोगों को मारा है। धीरे-धीरे आगे बढ़ते हुए यह फिल्म बीच-बीच में फ्लैश बैक में भी जाती है और तब समझ आता है कि जिस बहुत उलझे हुए कथानक के बीच हम फंसे पड़े हैं, उसके धागे असल में कहां तक फैले हुए हैं।

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Image of scene from the film Do Deewane Seher Mein
Do Deewane Seher Mein

Romance, Drama (Hindi)

Two socially awkward millennials in Mumbai find love while struggling with self-acceptance. As they battle insecurities and societal pressure, their journey takes them from city chaos to mountain serenity.

Cast: Siddhant Chaturvedi, Mrunal Thakur, Ila Arun, Joy Sengupta, Ayesha Raza Mishra, Viraj Ghelani, Sandeepa Dhar, Deepraj Rana, Mona Ambegaonkar, Naveen Kaushik
Director: Ravi Udyawar
Writer: Abhiruchi Chand


FCG Member Reviewer Anuj Kumar
Anuj Kumar | The Hindu
A reluctant nod to imperfect love

Sat, February 21 2026

Siddhant Chaturvedi and Mrunal Thakur fail to rise above flimsy conflicts in this plodding romantic drama, devoid of passion

When the trailer of Ravi Udaywar’s romantic drama Do Deewane Seher Mein surfaced online, one was hooked to the tune of Gulzar’s melancholic Do Deewane (Gharaonda), searching for home and sustenance all over again. The haunting voice of Bhupinder Singh and the melody in Runa Laila’s timbre continue to capture the dreams, hope, and loneliness that lovebirds face in big cities. However, it turns out that old gold is being refashioned to win over a new audience, but the carat is compromised in the process.

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Image of scene from the film Assi
FCG Rating for the film Assi: 66/100
Assi

Crime, Drama, Thriller (Hindi)

An investigative courtroom drama based on the alarming statistic of nearly eighty sexual assault cases reported daily in India. In just one day. Every day.

Cast: Taapsee Pannu, Kani Kusruti, Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub, Manoj Pahwa, Kumud Mishra, Revathi, Naseeruddin Shah, Supriya Pathak, Rajendra Sethi, Satyajit Sharma
Director: Anubhav Sinha
Writer: Gaurav Solanki, Anubhav Sinha


FCG Member Reviewer Anuj Kumar
Anuj Kumar | The Hindu
An unyielding indictment of collective complicity

Sat, February 21 2026

Led by a fiercely committed ensemble, this moral interrogation of rape culture by filmmaker Anubhav Sinha dissects the anatomy of sexual violation and the perilous world we have built for our children

Javed Akhtar once famously said art and culture are the vocal cords of society. This week, writer-filmmaker Anubhav Sinha and co-writer Gaurav Solanki give a sarkari statistic on rape, a scarred face, an unflinching voice, and a social context. The outcome is deeply disquieting as the film investigates the pervasive rape culture, institutional complicity, and the gruelling aftermath for survivors. Sinha’s relentless expression of the state of helplessness and depravity makes one leave an impression of anguish on the seat’s armrest.

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FCG Member Reviewer Nonika Singh
Nonika Singh | The Tribune
Traumatic, hard-hitting, unavoidable

Sat, February 21 2026

Watch it, not for you are a man or a woman, but as an integral member of a society which needs course-correction

How often have we read news reports of a woman being gangraped in a moving car and how often have we turned insular to reportage of such heinous incidents? In his latest film ‘Assi’, acclaimed director Anubhav Sinha not only gives a face, heart and soul to a rape survivor, but also stirs something deep within us. With horror, we watch a young woman, Parima (Kani Kusruti), being pulled into a car by a bunch of youngsters. Hereafter, what happens is meant to evoke repugnance and Anubhav succeeds in bringing out the reprehensibility of the crime in a no-holds-barred sequence. How can this crime against women, rather humanity, be fun for some? The thought is as unsettling as searing.

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FCG Member Reviewer Priyanka Roy
Priyanka Roy | The Telegraph
Assi is heavy-handed in parts, but an urgent, thought-provoking watch

Fri, February 20 2026

'Assi' raises critical questions about justice and societal attitudes towards sexual violence. The movie blends mainstream elements with a pressing social message.

Anubhav Sinha is a fine filmmaker. More importantly, he is a fine filmmaker with a conscience that refuses to be cowed down and a voice that resists being drowned out. After Islamophobia (Mulk), caste chasm (Article 15), marital violence (Thappad) and the pandemic-induced migrant crisis (Bheed), Sinha trains his lens on rape, with the title of his latest film Assi being derived from a terrifying statistic that slaps one in the face, hard and long, as soon as the film begins. As many as 80 women are raped in India every day, one happening every 27 minutes. Assi keeps reminding you of these numbers, in ways more direct than subtle, throughout its 143-minute runtime.

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Image of scene from the film The Last Thing He Told Me S02
The Last Thing He Told Me S02

Mystery, Drama (English)

A woman must forge a relationship with her teenage stepdaughter in order to find her husband, who has mysteriously disappeared.

Cast: Jennifer Garner, Angourie Rice, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau


FCG Member Reviewer Sonal Pandya
Sonal Pandya | Times Now, Zoom
Jennifer Garner Leads Starry Guest Cast In Engaging Family Drama

Sat, February 21 2026

Based on the sequel from author Laura Dave, the mystery thriller ably expands on the story from Season 1 and picks up five years later.

Jennifer Garner is back as Hannah Hall in this family thriller, The Last Thing He Told Me. In the first season, Hannah watched as husband, Owen (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau), disappeared after his tech company faced financial issues. She and her stepdaughter, Bailey (Angourie Rice), learn to move on with their lives. The Apple TV series returns after a three-year gap with Owen back in their lives, opening up a whole can of worms. The mystery drama series leans heavily on its past with several Hollywood stars from David Morse, Rita Wilson, and Judy Greer, as the show travels to France to close out a traumatic chapter.

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Image of scene from the film Heated Rivalry
Heated Rivalry

Drama (English)

Two of the biggest stars in Major League Hockey are bound by ambition, rivalry, and a magnetic pull neither of them fully understands. What begins as a secret fling between two fresh faced rookies evolves into a years-long journey of love, denial, and self-discovery.

Cast: Hudson Williams, Connor Storrie, François Arnaud, Robbie G.K., Christina Chang, Dylan Walsh, Ksenia Daniela Kharlamova
Director: Jacob Tierney
Writer: Jacob Tierney


FCG Member Reviewer Sonal Pandya
Sonal Pandya | Times Now, Zoom
Connor Storrie, Hudson Williams Carry Cliched But Endearing Queer Hockey Romance

Sat, February 21 2026

Based on the romance series by Rachel Reid, the buzzy Canadian show follows the decade-long romance between two rival players, Canada’s Shane Hollander and Russia’s Ilya Rozanov.

Created, written, and directed by Jacob Tierney, Crave’s Canadian series Heated Rivalry has taken the world by storm. On February 20, it lands in India on Lionsgate Play. The show adapts the books of author Rachel Reid, which focus on the unlikely love story between two top players, Canada’s Shane Hollander (Hudson Williams) and Russia’s Ilya Rozanov (Connor Storrie). Tierney’s show elevates the material, getting to the heart of the matter as the two men meet when they are teenagers as rivals and end up as each other’s partners, away from the public eye. The low-budget series connects strongly due to its heartwarming screenplay and the refreshing performances from the cast.

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Image of scene from the film The Night Agent S03
The Night Agent S03

Action & Adventure, Drama, Mystery (English)

Brought together by a midnight phone call, an FBI agent and a cybersecurity expert must unravel an ever-growing web of political conspiracies.

Cast: Gabriel Basso


FCG Member Reviewer Sonal Pandya
Sonal Pandya | Times Now, Zoom
Gabriel Basso's Everyman Hero Delivers The Goods Again In Thrilling New Instalment

Sat, February 21 2026

Created by Shawn Ryan, the spy series churns out its best season yet as FBI operative Peter Sutherland digs deep to uncover a conspiracy.

Last season, Peter Sutherland made a deal with the devil, and this time, it comes back to haunt him again. The likeable and dependable Gabriel Basso is back to lead Netflix’s The Night Agent for its third season. Created by Shawn Ryan, the espionage drama loses a few key players from previous seasons, but gains intrigue with another White House mystery that leaves viewers on the edge throughout. The first season of The Night Agent is ranked tenth in Netflix’s most-watched shows of all time, and the drama has enough juice to power a few more seasons, going by the quality of this latest instalment.

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Image of scene from the film O'Romeo
FCG Rating for the film O'Romeo: 48/100
O'Romeo

Crime, Drama, Action (Hindi)

What fate awaits a stonehearted gangster and bloodthirsty womaniser when true love claims him, helpless and unguarded? A gang war that shakes the entire underworld and crime syndicate to their very roots. A forbidden love; the tale of an unrequited passion.

Cast: Shahid Kapoor, Triptii Dimri, Avinash Tiwary, Nana Patekar, Vikrant Massey, Tamannaah Bhatia, Disha Patani, Farida Jalal, Aruna Irani, Hussain Dalal
Director: Vishal Bhardwaj


FCG Member Reviewer Ishita Sengupta
Ishita Sengupta | Independent Film Critic
(Writing for OTT Play)
Vishal Bhardwaj’s Bloody Tale Of Love Has No Heart

Tue, February 17 2026

Unlike other Bhardwaj films, which, almost always, hide yearning within pockets of brutality, O'Romeo unfolds as a love story suffused with blood, but the heart refuses to beat.

All Filmmakers plot legacy. For Vishal Bhardwaj, it filters to adaptations. The 60-year-old’s career — including 12 feature films in 24 years — is shaped, mostly, by taking literary texts and supplanting them in a world of his making. One can debate the merits, but there is something to be said about the tendency to assert his voice most intensely in borrowed words, thereby amplifying the collaborative spirit of creation. A chief collaborator, in this regard, has been Shakespeare, whose plays assume great malleability in the director’s hands. Bhardwaj’s latest, O’Romeo, is not drawn from one of the playwright’s works but still culminates as an ineffective Shakespeare adaptation — a first from the director.

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FCG Member Reviewer Tusshar Sasi
Tusshar Sasi | Filmy Sasi
A potboiler sans passion and payoff

Sun, February 15 2026

Vishal Bhardwaj’s cinematic universes can be wildly imaginative. They are the kind where two warring sisters, desperate to escape each other’s sight, end up marrying two brothers by accident. Historically, however, the Indian film industry’s version of audacity usually involves a hero incinerating a factory and sauntering away in slow motion while digital fumes billow behind him. This “mass” template is now more common than a childbirth scene, or a Muslim protagonist shown as an ordinary office worker instead of a kohl-eyed gangster. Trying to join both aspects of their respective universes, O’Romeo uses Bhardwaj’s brand of weirdness and masala movie flamboyance to create a confused mixture with no emotion and limited punch.

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FCG Member Reviewer Sachin Chatte
Sachin Chatte | The Navhind Times Goa
Sharper Razor, Duller Drama

Sun, February 15 2026

Vishal Bhardwaj returns to the big screen after Patakha (2018), although his last outing, Khufiya (2023), was released on Netflix. O Romeo has ambition and style, but at nearly three hours, it lacks the substance required to sustain that runtime and offers little that feels new.

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Image of scene from the film Pennum Porattum
Pennum Porattum

Comedy, Drama (Malayalam)

In Pattada, a village defined by its association with death, the narrative centers on Gopalan Master, Charulatha, and Suttu, each facing the village's harsh judgment and violence. Through their struggles, the story highlights the plight of the marginalized. Suttu finds solace in freedom, choosing to leave. However, Charulatha remains, her future precarious, trapped within Pattada's cycle of violence and injustice.

Cast: Rajesh Madhavan, Raina Radhakrishnan, Tovino Thomas, Mithun Haridas
Director: Rajesh Madhavan
Writer: Ravi Sankar


FCG Member Reviewer Vishal Menon
Vishal Menon | The Hollywood Reporter India
A Truly Inventive Absurd Comedy

Tue, February 17 2026

It’s impressive how first-time director Rajesh Madhavan—who also stars in the film—creates a multi-layered universe that feels distinctly original.

It’s very much a part of the design to start watching Pennum Porattum (The Girl And The Circus) from Suttu’s POV. Voiced by Tovino Thomas, Suttu is a white mongrel with black spots all over and the refugee the film talks about in its opening statement refers to those like Suttu. In his introductory voiceover, he’s letting us in on his daily routine and the number of times he’s been shifted in and out of his master’s house. He isn’t particularly happy there, nor is he comfortable in his tiny cage. And as we see stones being pelted at Suttu from outside, in a fit of rage, he shouts back and calls them “Manushyante makkale!”, which is something along the lines of “You sons of humans!”

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Image of scene from the film Tu Yaa Main
FCG Rating for the film Tu Yaa Main: 63/100
Tu Yaa Main

Thriller, Romance, Adventure (Hindi)

Trapped in an empty swimming pool, two content creators must fight for their survival against a ferocious, bloodthirsty natural predator.

Cast: Adarsh Gourav, Shanaya Kapoor, Kshitee Jog, Parul Gulati, Ansh Chopra, Mona Singh, Hussain Dalal
Director: Bejoy Nambiar
Writer: Abhishek Bandekar


FCG Member Reviewer Ishita Sengupta
Ishita Sengupta | Independent Film Critic
(Writing for OTT Play)
Campy Crocodile Drama Has The Right Thrills

Mon, February 16 2026

May well craft its own legacy for the personality it gives crocodiles — as if a reptilian union finally demanded better roles, and Bejoy Nambiar obliged. It pays off.

Bejoy Nambiar’s Tu Yaa Main, a relationship drama in the garb of a creature film, redeems an animal and a profession. Both, unfortunately, were subjected to great disservice in Hindi films. Given that the animal has lasted longer, its ignominy is greater, and therefore, the absolution was both inevitable and overdue. Nambiar’s film proves to be largely effective in this regard as it takes crocodiles from the mouth of disrepute and posits them in a narrative where they are given space to lay eggs, chill a little, and nap.

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FCG Member Reviewer Udita Jhunjhunwala
Udita Jhunjhunwala | Mint, Scroll.in
Thriller has bite but takes too long to sink its teeth in

Mon, February 16 2026

Bejoy Nambiar's film, starring Adarsh Gourav and Shanaya Kapoor, combines creature feature with romantic drama and class commentary

Directed by Bejoy Nambiar and adapted by Himanshu Sharma from the 2018 Thai thriller The Pool, directed by Ping Lumpraploeng, Tu Yaa Main is a curious addition to Hindi cinema’s sporadic engagement with the creature feature. The original was a compact, high-concept survival drama built around the simple premise of a man trapped in a drained swimming pool with a crocodile, trying to find a way out. Nambiar retains the skeletal premise but sets aside that minimalism, expanding the thriller framework into a 145-minute romantic drama inserted with class commentary and influencer satire. The result is an ambitious film intermittently exhausting itself instead of tightening its grip.

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FCG Member Reviewer Sachin Chatte
Sachin Chatte | The Navhind Times Goa
Magar Much Touble in the Pool

Sun, February 15 2026

Inspired by Ping Lumpraploeng’s Thai film The Pool (2018), Tu Yaa Main shifts between Mumbai and a 20-foot-deep swimming pool somewhere along the Goa–Mumbai highway. The story of a couple trapped in an empty pool with a crocodile for company offers a solid premise for a survival thriller.

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Image of scene from the film Kohrra 2
FCG Rating for the film Kohrra 2: 73/100
Kohrra 2

Crime, Drama (Hindi)

When an NRI bridegroom is found dead days before his wedding in the countryside of Punjab, two cops must unravel the troubling case as turbulence unfolds in their own lives.

Cast: Barun Sobti, Mona Singh


FCG Member Reviewer Srivathsan Nadadhur
Srivathsan Nadadhur | Independent Film Critic
(Writing for M9 News)
Worthy Sequel With Winsome Performances

Sat, February 14 2026

Preet Bajwa is found dead on her family’s poultry farm. Cops Dhanwant Kaur and Amritpal Garundi soon discover the family has been hiding a dark secret for twenty years: they were keeping people as slaves. As the police get closer to the truth, the family takes desperate, violent steps to hide their crimes. The story shows how old secrets eventually catch up to people and destroy their lives.

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FCG Member Reviewer Anuj Kumar
Anuj Kumar | The Hindu
Mona Singh pierces through the mist of motives in this intriguing police procedural

Sat, February 14 2026

An unflinching social lens, a haunting atmosphere, and strong lead performances make wading through Sudeep Sharma’s ‘Kohrra’ a lingering emotional experience all over again

There has always been a gap between the Punjab we watch on screen and the one we actually experience off-screen. Of late, there has been an attempt to look beyond the lavish weddings, bhangra beats, and bucolic humour. Carrying forward the Maachis that Gulzar lit in 1996 and Gurvinder Singh nurtured over the years, Sudeep Sharma’s Kohrra is one such significant attempt to pierce through the miasma that hangs over the mustard fields.

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FCG Member Reviewer Nonika Singh
Nonika Singh | The Tribune
Fog lifts, Kohrra is still a winner

Sat, February 14 2026

The show is a forceful knock on our head which splits the class divide wide open

When ‘Kohrra’ came in 2023, it was a breath of fresh air which not only put a majorly Punjabi language series on the world map of OTT, but showed a state dipped in shades of realism. Now, as its second season streams, the template is kind of… same. It’s still a police procedural with loads of human drama at the centre of it. ‘Kohrra 2’ starts on a similar note: murder of an NRI. But, hereafter, the series — again set in the hinterland of Punjab — takes a life of its own and envelops you as much in the mysterious air of whodunit as the lives of its protagonists. Investigation begins and we are all agog to know who has murdered this young lady Preet (Pooja Bhamrrah), a divorcee who loved to make reels and by no stretch of imagination was a pushover.

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Image of scene from the film Couple Friendly
Couple Friendly

Romance, Drama (Telugu)

After connecting on a rideshare app, a young couple struggling to achieve their respective dreams form a romantic connection.

Cast: Santosh Shoban, Manasa Varanasi, Rajiv Kanakala, Sriranjini, Yogi Babu, Livingston, Goparaju Ramana
Director: Ashwin Chandrasekar
Writer: Ashwin Chandrasekar


FCG Member Reviewer Srivathsan Nadadhur
Srivathsan Nadadhur | Independent Film Critic
(Writing for The Hindu)
Santosh Soban, Manasa Varanasi’s romance drama is mature and heartfelt

Sat, February 14 2026

First-time director Ashwin Chandrasekar uses a breezy, slice-of-life exterior to capture the ebbs and flows of modern-day relationships

Until the early 90s, Chennai (then Madras) served as a common backdrop for Telugu films. However, the subsequent industry shift to Hyderabad gradually altered the geographical canvas of its stories. Despite Chennai remaining a preferred destination for the Telugu community in nearby regions of Andhra Pradesh for livelihood for years, modern-day filmmakers have seldom explored their enduring connection with the city through a contemporary lens.

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Image of scene from the film Ashakal Aayiram
Ashakal Aayiram

Drama (Malayalam)

Cast: Jayaram, Kalidas Jayaram, Asha Sarath, Ishaani Krishna, Anand Manmadhan, Zhinz Shan, Raffi, Sharafudheen, Sudheer Paravoor, Akhil Nrd
Director: G. Prajith
Writer: Aravind Rajendran, Jude Anthany Joseph


FCG Member Reviewer Vishal Menon
Vishal Menon | The Hollywood Reporter India
The Jayaram We Missed In This Wholesome Anthikadian Comedy

Sat, February 14 2026

Packed with meta jokes, the film unfolds like a Greatest Hits redux of memories that have come to make Jayaram feel special to us.

‘History repeats itself’ is the phrase that kept coming to mind while watching Jayaram’s delightfully old-school Ashakal Aayiram, co-starring his son Kalidas. Yet, when you think of a film reuniting this real-life father-son duo, you might first be tempted to recall Kochu Kochu Santhoshangal, the charming Sathyan Anthikad comedy that brought them together the first time. But if you observe closely, the soul of Ashakal Aayiram is closer in spirit to another Anthikad classic, the 1999 family drama Veendum Chila Veettukaryangal.

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