
The shaky-cam, jump cuts, and “glitches” are used intelligently, not as a gimmick. The low-res aesthetic actually hides budget limitations and amplifies the realism. A scene where the crew records Aadhi teaching them how to fold space-time using a kitchen rolling pin is pure comedic gold. What Doesn’t Work: The Flaws 1. Pacing Problems in the Second Half The first 60 minutes are tight, witty, and unpredictable. But around the 70-minute mark, the film falls into a familiar trap: a government agency (led by a one-note Aju Varghese as a bumbling ASI) chasing the alien, extended chase sequences, and a slightly preachy monologue about saving Earth. The satirical edge dulls into conventional action-comedy.
Yes, the same Ganesh Kumar known for melodramatic dialogues in family dramas. Here, he plays Aadhi with deadpan, melancholic humor—part retired soldier, part weary grandfather. His prosthetic makeup is convincing, but his eyes do the real work. When he quietly says, “I’ve seen three galaxies collapse, but nothing scares me like Kerala’s auto drivers,” the audience erupts. released shows malayalam sci-fi 2025
Let’s be honest: the spaceship reveal in the climax looks like a PS3 cutscene. For a film that smartly hides its limitations for 90% of its runtime, the final 10 minutes overreach. The alien homeworld’s design is creative (bioluminescent backwaters and floating coconuts), but the rendering is rough. Hardcore sci-fi fans may wince. The shaky-cam, jump cuts, and “glitches” are used
Amazon Prime Video (as of April 2025) Theater run: Limited but extended due to word-of-mouth. What Doesn’t Work: The Flaws 1