Drishyam 3

Vampire Owl: I did not think that this was ever going to have a third movie.

Vampire Bat: I consider the ending of Drishyam 2 as a classic closure.

Vampire Owl: Even the first Drishyam had a fine ending.

Vampire Bat: The second movie had kept its standard and everything came together in the end.

Vampire Owl: Well, they still wanted a third movie for some reason.

Vampire Bat: Maybe the wanted to have a very high grossing movie in the franchise.

Vampire Owl: An inferior Hindi version would always have higher collection.

Vampire Bat: I think this wanted to go on the Lucifer 2 model banking on earlier success.

Vampire Owl: Yet they are not planning to create a better sequel here at all.

Vampire Bat: There is rarely a sequel which is better than the original, not even Alien and Predator.

[Gets some burritos and three cups of hot chocolate with tea].

What is the movie about? :: Five years have passed after Georgekutty (Mohanlal) provided Varun’s (Roshan Basheer) remains to Geetha (Asha Sharath) and Prabhakar (Siddique), and Thomas (Murali Gopy) who had investigated the case had also felt that there was no scope in the case. Now, Georgekutty, Rani (Meena), Anu (Esther Anil) and Anju (Ansiba Hassan) feel that they are now in a safe zone, with assurance from their lawyer Renuka (Santhi Mayadevi). Geogekutty has also produced a movie with superstar Harikumar (Biju Menon) as the hero, inspired from the events of their own life. He even gets into good terms with the eye witness who testified against him earlier, Jose (Ajith Koothattukalum) and Mary (Krishna Praba). The other police officers involved with the same case, DySP Philip Mathew (K B Ganesh Kumar) and CI Antony (Antony Perumbavoor) are also not interested in taking the case any further, and Sabu (Sumesh Chandran) who was also involved in the case as an undercover police officer is under suspension and has no interest in anything.

So, what happens with the events here as we just keep looking? :: A former police officer Suresh Babu (Irshad) becomes friends with Georgekutty, who becomes confident that he has some contact with the police department. But at the same time, Yamini (Veena Nandakumar), an investigative journalist with the support of the cameraman Rony (Shiva Hariharan) becomes more interested in the same and starts asking questions about the incidents related to Georgekutty all by herself despite the channel not showing that much interest in the same due to Geetha and Prabhakar no longer pushing that hard for their son. Georgekutty has the other people involved in the case under his wing and payment in the form of Rajan (Dinesh Prabhakar), Mathayi (Royas Marmakala) and Shreya (Shraddha Gokul) as they keep his special secrets safe with them. The director of his movie, Aneesh Raj (Muhammad Musthafa) chooses Georgekutty for another movie and things seem to get even better for him, but an old rival Sahadevan (Kalabhavan Shajohn) once again comes to the picture. How will it change the overall situation?

The defence of Drishyam 3 :: The movie continues to have that suspense element, and twists are added right towards the end, with new opponents coming out of nowhere and desperate situations requiring desperate measures. The movie with fine visuals, tries to have a closure to at least one question of the tale related to the protagonist while leaving the options for even a fourth movie right there in the end which could have further manipulations. The performances work well, and bringing some new characters to the light works nicely to bring the much-needed deviations that lead to the twist that defines the journey yet again. The relationship between the main character and his family remains something of significance and as this one goes in that direction, appeals to the family audience really well, and as an emotional drama score without trouble. The feeling that friends are the one’s causing trouble from behind, and with opponents becoming friends, this is a tale that brings a lot of dynamic character changes. The characters who have been close to our hearts to get the attention that they deserve yet again.

The claws of flaw :: Compared to the previous two movies this third film is a step downwards indeed, and as we keep wishing for something special to be added, what we get is something that comes down in the overall quality. There doesn’t seem to be that much of an effort to elevate the movie, and coming after two fine endings in precious two movies which would not have demanded sequels, this one ends with the possibility of a sequel without a closure, and that makes one wonder about the future possibilities as much as why this one could not capitalize on the basics which were already laid. The difficulty in matching that final twists of earlier movies can be seen here. The movie had also taken a lot of time to get to the main area of the tale, with a lot of time going on to find some interesting points. The idea of depending more on coincidences or far-fetched possibilities does not serve the purpose that much as compared with the more realistic happenings – this one feel more of luck-based rather than anything else. There is the feeling that this one is less natural and beyond the common man or usual smart man and something often forced.

The performers of the soul :: Mohanlal once again comes up with a masterclass in restrained acting which stands above the rest. He excels even when the tale seems to go in the wrong direction, and we see him keeping things in control. Meena does seem to have lesser jobs to do in each movie of the franchise, and seems to have to go through the same, but the same is maintained well. Ansiba Hassan remains good in the one role in which we remember her, and Esther Anil manages the character’s moving on to maturity well. Kalabhavan Shajohn’s return is good, but it also feels a little strange in characteristics, and not maintained well to the end. Siddique character change is not that much believable and feels forced, even though it is performed well. Murali Gopy is one person who remains solid and maintains the level of his character, and it is one work that feels perfect. Veena Nandakumar is wasted after a fine beginning, while Irshad, Santhi Mayadevi and Dinesh Prabhakar leaves a mark. Ajith Koothattukalum also has more to do here and he does even better than the earlier movie.

How it finishes :: The movie remains somewhat a good continuation to tale which has kept us interested with two entries in the franchise and also spawned so many remakes in different languages. There is still the fact that it could not meet the grand expectations which is always associated with this particular franchise. In between, Jeethu Joseph had come up with other thrillers, a superior Kooman and inferior Neru, 12th Man and Mirage. The movie succeeds in keeping audiences interested in its suspenseful narrative, emotional family drama and strong performances led by Mohanlal in another work to remember. The exploration of the long-term consequences of the protagonist’s actions and the psychological burden carried by the man who is determined to protect his family at the expense of others, also gets something extra here. Just like Lucifer 2: Empuraan, this one has scored with the initial collections so well that it does not need that much of opinions from the audience to become the fourth highest grossing movie of all-time in Malayalam movie industry, but one would feel that Drishyam 2 would have scored even higher at the box-office if it had released in theatres as the quality was surely much higher there. For now, Amazon Prime Video has this one ready for your eyes and soul.

Release date: 21st May 2026
Running time: 160 minutes
Directed by: Jeethu Joseph
Starring: Mohanlal, Meena, Ansiba Hassan, Esther Anil, Kalabhavan Shajohn, Ajith Koothattukalum, Kirshna Prabha, Asha Sharath, Siddique, Murali Gopy, K B Ganesh Kumar, Veena Nandakumar, Shiva Hariharan, Irshad, Santhi Mayadevi, Anjali Nair, Dinesh Prabhakar, Antony Perumbavoor, Srikant Murali, Sumesh Chandran

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@ Cemetery Watch
✠ The Vampire Bat.

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