Vampire Owl: I see a movie about midnight here.
Vampire Bat: I do not think that this movie is about vampires drinking blood at midnight.
Vampire Owl: Yes, I know we are supposed to prefer the witching hour over midnight.
Vampire Bat: Witching hour has now been copyrighted by witches.
Vampire Owl: They cannot have that. They already have infinite access to all magic.
Vampire Bat: They control most of the demons of our realm.
Vampire Owl: There was a time when they only controlled animated skeletons.
Vampire Bat: According to the new pact, they have transferred them to necromancers.
Vampire Owl: Necromancers have always animated dead bones.
Vampire Bat: These are perfect skeletons, and not those created out of random bones.
[Gets a paneer puffs and three cups of Kandy tea].
What is the movie about? :: SI Jancy Kurian (Navya Nair) is the new Sub Inspector of a rural police station on probation, who is struggling with a certain amount of confusion as a beginner while also trying to cope with her personal life which is close to breaking down due to the possibility of a divorce, despite them having a much-celebrated love marriage some time ago. Her personal life keeps her detached from social life and her approach to different cases is also hampered due to her fear of being alone in life as they live separate from their families after the love marriage which came out of a college relationship. Civil Police Officer Hareesh N V (Soubin Shahir) is also facing divorce and is going through a custody crisis with his wife, who keeps asserting that their daughter should stay with her at all times. The inability to talk to his daughter and the hostility of his wife also starts affecting Hareesh as he becomes not interested in working with women. But on one night, due to a sudden requirement of leave for another policeman, Jancy and Hareesh are forced to team up for a night patrol together.
So, what happens with the events here as we just keep looking? :: On the same night, as they travel near the forest, they see a car parked in a suspicious manner among the greenery. As they approach, they see a man running away and the woman in car drives the vehicle away. They chase the man who jumps into a swamp area and vanishes. Hareesh tells Jancy that there is no point in doing anything now as the person would have gone through the swamp to the other side and escaped. At the same time, they get a call about a girl committing suicide and Hareesh tells her to just leave as this is just irrelevant search that could lead them to trouble. Returning to the swamp out of guilt and worries, she is shocked to find the area recently covered with sand and wonders if someone could be under the sand. This further affects her daily actions, as she wonders if someone was dead and buried due to them. He talks to Hareesh about the same, but he dismisses these concerns and adds that the man would have escaped at that point itself.
And what more is to happen as further complications arise? :: Her anxiety increases as her husband in a complicated relationship with her leaves home after resigning his job, just after leaving her a letter. As the swamp was covered illegally, the court orders for the swamp to be reverted to its original form due to environmental concerns, but it is then that a corpse is found from under the ground. The dead body is identified to be that of a well-known journalist and investigative reporter Ansar Ali (Sunny Wayne), who was reported missing on the night when the two cops had seen the unknown figure. After checking multiple cameras and conducting unofficial investigations, they understand the woman who was with Ansar, his former college mate Anjali (Athmiya Rajan). But as she is the daughter of the DYSP, Suresh Kumar Menon (Achyuth Kumar), and he would make sure that nobody would know that she was with a married man among the trees and swamps in a car, and Anjali is also not interested in talking to anyone about it as it would devastate Ansar’s marriage and reputation as a leading journalist. As Hareesh and Jancy were there at that time and with the same proven through their walkie-talkie and mobile locations, they become easy targets to be framed for this murder. Can they escape from this situation and find the real culprits?
The defence of Paathirathri :: Navya Nair comes up with a highly controlled performance as SI Jancy Kurian, as she shows the physical and emotional strain of a woman balancing a troubled personal life and a demanding job, but tries hard to maintain both. Soubin Shahir also balances both, but he is more of a police officer than a husband in this one, but the conflict is nicely shown by him too. Their chemistry on screen can also be considered as one of the film’s highlights. With the support of their performances, the movie goes through the fatigue and psychological burdens beneath the police uniform and this brings an engaging, realistic rhythm which never goes for an overdose which would keep it realistic to the core. The visual are interesting and suitable, as the foggy landscape is beautifully captured to create a moody, tense aesthetic that suits this world of mystery. The tension is always there and so is the mystery which is never really solved until the very end, which provides that much needed twist.
Positives and negatives :: The movie could have had a little more of conviction with its content, as we see this never really providing the feeling that there is danger around. Even though the pace is fine, there are moments when it could have been increased further. The movie does not have that much to go to a length about two hours. But we can see that Harisree Ashokan and Indrans who come only in small roles could also make a fine impact. Athmiya Rajan who is best known for Joseph, does incredibly well too, and she is one underrated actress whom we should be seeing more often in movies, and there is some stoicism in her character here which find close to life. Ann Augustine also nails her role in a way that we would remember her with a certain amount of melancholy of the character which we notice realistically. When the emotional and personal side of the police is shown instead of showing them as machines on case, one can feel that this goes the realistic path. The final twist is surely working, and we are able to connect with the main characters who feel real. The investigative side could have been more powerful though.
How it finishes :: Paathirathri remains a movie which needed a better attention that it managed to get, as realistic police investigations with focus on emotions of the focus is very much rare in the industry even though flawed cops like those of Memories, John Luther, Abraham Ozler, all are still there and hunting psychopaths. The mystery here does not point that much to danger and fear generation though. But we see that clear sense of empathy for people with some power trapped in a flawed system which allows those with even more influence to take advantage of them and even ruin their lives forever. Despite the thoughtfulness and the competence in a real world that we see here, the narrative does struggle at times. For those who are looking for a slow-burning, performance-driven work focusing on the vulnerabilities behind the people in uniform, this works, even in a slower pace. After all, we are not making those dumb Bollywood police movies which turn into a universe which has ridiculous buffoons as police officers, and have lady cops who are even dumb and brainless as Lady Singhams.
Release date: 17 October 2025
Running time: 128 minutes
Directed by: Ratheena P T
Starring: Navya Nair, Soubin Shahir, Sunny Wayne, Ann Augustine, Athmiya Rajan, Harisree Ashokan, Indrans
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@ Cemetery Watch
✠ The Vampire Bat.


