Tamil Movie - Virumandi

The climax of Virumandi’s version: Kottala kidnaps Virumandi’s sister, , to lure him into a trap. Virumandi breaks into Kottala’s fortress-like mansion. A brutal, bone-crunching fight ensues. In self-defense, Virumandi claims he merely knocked Kottala unconscious. But the next morning, the landlord is found dead—hanged. Virumandi is arrested. “See?” he says. “I’m innocent. The village elders framed me.”

Magimai is moved. She believes him. She prepares to file a report… until the jailer laughs. “You only heard the goat. Now hear the tiger.” virumandi tamil movie

The first storyteller is (Kamal Haasan)—a notorious, hot-headed but inherently good-hearted feudal farmer. He’s on death row, accused of killing his rival, the village landlord Oomaiyandi “Kottala” Thevar (Napoleon). A young, idealistic human rights activist named Magimai (Abhirami) visits him, hoping to document a “false confession.” In self-defense, Virumandi claims he merely knocked Kottala

Magimai is shattered. Which story is true? Virumandi the folk hero? Or Virumandi the monster? “See

In the sun-scorched village of Koodankulam in Tamil Nadu, a murder on a full-moon night becomes a legend whispered in fear and awe. The story isn't told straight; it unravels inside a prison cell, through the eyes of two men who saw the same events but lived two entirely different worlds.

The story of Virumandi is not about who killed whom. It is about the prison we build with our own version of the truth. And sometimes, the worst cage is not made of iron bars, but of the story we refuse to stop telling ourselves.

The final night is retold: Kottala didn’t kidnap Ponamma; he went to negotiate peace. Virumandi ambushed him, tied him up, and tortured him for hours. Then, in a moment of cold, psychotic rage, Virumandi hanged Kottala—but the rope slipped, leaving him paralyzed, not dead. Virumandi fled, assuming the murder was complete.