Vampire Owl: I remember that we had a thought about watching this one in the theatre.
Vampire Bat: Yes, but it is now on Sony LIV, and so we get to it.
Vampire Owl: I feel that Sony LIV has some of the most unexpected releases.
Vampire Bat: Some classic movies are surely around there.
Vampire Owl: Recharging with that Airtel unlimited offer did have that advantage.
Vampire Bat: We had lost the urge to watch movies in theatres anyway.
Vampire Owl: Yes, one of the things which corona virus lockdown had changed.
Vampire Bat: Yet the world remains too much the same.
Vampire Owl: Well, world changes, but how many times can a vampire change?
Vampire Bat: A vampire is not immune to uncertainties of life.
[Gets a poori masala and three cups of Kandy tea].
What is the movie about? :: SI Jayakrishnan (Vinayakan) is assigned with what seemed to be a usual case of local unrest following the elopement of a young woman that was slowly moving towards a communal problem due to the woman being a Hindu and the man being a Muslim. To add to this, the man had denied any involvement in the woman going missing, making the woman’s family even more angry and frustrated. But there is no proof that the two even talked to each other except for someone who looked like him being seen around. Soon, they find out that the woman had not eloped with anyone they knew. As he digs deeper and deeper, Jayakrishnan begins noticing inconsistencies and understands that there is something that lies deep beneath. He understands a long-running pattern of missing women across the rural areas of Kerala and Tamil Nadu, divorced, widowed or unmarried for a very long time, each last seen with only one unidentified man. There seems to be some pattern about this.
So, what happens with the events here as we just keep looking? :: There is also an alternating pattern that after a murder occurs in Kerala, the next one takes place in Tamil Nadu, as missing women from Kerala seems to travel to Tamil Nadu, and vice versa. The investigation reveals that each victim’s phone is used to call and communicate the next target, forming an unbroken chain. To help the investigation further, they seek the help of a police officer in the border and with good knowledge of both state investigations, Stanley Das (Mammootty). The number of victims and possible victims only keep increasing, to Deepa (Shruti Ramachandran), Divya (Rajisha Vijayan), Babitha (Malavika Menon), Nandhini (Malavika Nair), Abhijitha (Dhanya Ananya), Shiny (Gayatri Arun), Anagha (Vaishnavi Sasikumar) Despite trying different methods to get the killer, the team keeps failing and reaching a dead end. They begin to suspect that a policeman might be involved and the person could be a psychopath with a perfect planning and identity. Can they find the person before times runs out?
The defence of Kalamkaval :: This is one movie that dares to go through divergent patterns. It does not take the usual path, but the narrative is kept really interesting, even without the situations not really following the parallel path. The tension and the mood are what keeps the movie going, that too with minimum gore and the violence is implied, never taking over the screen despite all the dark mood that has spread through the flick. The tension goes further with the cat and mouse game that prevails throughout its run. The visuals are really good and the dark tone does not keep the visual beauty down. There are not many dramatic sequences in the movie, as we look further, and there is no attempt to take this to the masses except for those few shots of the main character. There is nothing heroic about the investigation here, which makes it closer to reality, and we see that this one progresses through understanding and observation. The silence is nicely used, and even the final action stays very realistic.
The claws of flaw :: The movie should have kept the suspense of the psychopath at least for some time instead of revealing during such an early moment. There was the requirement for some shock element, and even that surprise in the beginning is delivered cold. This where the slow pace comes in, and we see the same pattern being repeated without anything new being added. The viewer keeps wondering if the overall length of the movie could have been less, thus making the movie more interesting with lesser victims shown – there is not much variety in the method, so seeing the same thing again and again was to be rather dull. The need for innovation was surely there to avoid repetitions here and there. There were moments where the movie really needed to pick up the pace too. The struggle to bring anything other than what has been repeated from the beginning can be seen, with the progress being so slow. One would keep wondering if something extra was there to be taken from behind.
The performers of the soul :: Mammootty leads the way in this film as an antagonist that we do not see from his side. The negative shade is more intense than ever, and remains bold and strong with that restrained evil which is not easy to portray. The psychological depth of the character is very well reflected in him, and could bring more appreciation with its presence in the OTT platform, and surely can have a sequel, or even a prequel. Vinayakan does his police role so well and in a realistic manner. This is one police character that gains no exaggeration, and we are with him throughout the investigation. This is one interesting character that goes so smooth that we love his way of doing things. The female characters only a get a few moments each, as there are so many of them, but it is Rajisha Vijayan who gets to do more and makes the short impact. In the end, it is Gayatri Arun who has more moments. Seema Sindhu Krishnan also has a throughout presence. Gibin Gopinath scores in the supporting moment, while the roles of Azees Nedumangad, Shyamaprasad and Kunchan are not extended despite having some scope around.
How it finishes :: Kalamkaval makes a quality journey with a fine narrative in its core. There is the feeling that more suspense could have been added, but this mode of journey in itself proves to be effective. The box-office collections of the movie is a reflection of the quality of the movie rather than anything else. Being a quietly disturbing, performance-driven investigative crime thriller depending on atmosphere and psychology will deprive the mass audience of what they have always wanted, but in that way, this one raises itself in overall quality. It had worked well through some of those carefully constructed scenes, and uses silence, restraint and visually beautiful storytelling to explore the darker corners of human mind, and makes us remember a few killers of John Luther, Forensic and Anjaam Paathira. You can forgive its slow pace and repetitions and go through the cinematic experience instead. It reminds us that even in the calm, there can be fear and terror, and we are reminded about how easy it is to exist side-by-side with terror.
Release date: 5th December 2025
Running time: 144 minutes
Directed by: Jithin K Jose
Starring: Mammootty, Vinayakan, Rajisha Vijayan, Shruti Ramachandran, Gayatri Arun, Gibin Gopinath, Shyamaprasad, Malavika Menon, Malavika Mohan, Megha Thomas, Vaishnavi Saikumar, Dhanya Ananya, N P Nisa, Azees Nedumangad, Kunchan, Biju Pappan, Ilavarasu, Kollam Thulasi, Catherine Mariya, Sudhi Kozhikode, Ranjini George, Aravind K S, Harisankar S G, Bibin Perumbillikunnel, R J Sooraj, Sindhu Varma, Seema Sindhu Krishnan, Devadevan Vijayaraghavan, Abee Suhana
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