Andharan (The Hunter) Tamil Movie Review: A Hunter That Hunts Old Stories!
Andharan (The Hunter) Tamil Movie Review: A Hunter That Hunts
Old Stories!
Prajin Padmanabhan has been appearing in back-to-back films.
After Samharam, which was released earlier in June 2026 and received an average
response, he returns with Andharan (The Hunter). While the actor continues to
get opportunities, this film once again struggles to give him a strong
breakthrough. Prajin delivers a sincere performance as IPS officer Chezhiyan
and does his best to carry the investigation scenes with confidence. Ivana Varun
plays Karthika with intensity and gives an aggressive performance that suits
the emotional demands of her character. Anupama Kumar appears as Chezhiyan's
aunt and psychiatrist, while M.K. Sambasivam, Senthil Kumari, Adhiran, and
Phathmen perform their respective roles adequately.
Written and directed by Santhosh Raavanan, the story begins
with an interesting mystery. Every man who proposes to Karthika or falls in
love with her ends up being murdered brutally. The shocking series of
murders leads IPS officer Chezhiyan to investigate the case. During the
investigation, Chezhiyan himself falls in love with Karthika, and both secretly
plan to get married. However, after their marriage, Karthika suddenly attempts
to kill him, making the mystery even more complicated.
As Chezhiyan continues his investigation, he discovers
painful incidents from Karthika's childhood. Her father never wanted a girl
child and ignored her during her early years. Ironically, after her birth, the
family started receiving wealth and good fortune, changing her father's
attitude. The emotional neglect during childhood deeply affects Karthika's
mental state. She begins to imagine herself as a man, and this psychological
conflict becomes the reason behind the murders whenever someone tries to marry
her.
The biggest challenge for Andharan is not its performances
but its screenplay. The first half slowly builds curiosity and keeps the
audience engaged. Unfortunately, the second half moves into very familiar
territory. The psychological explanation and climax may remind viewers of
scenes they have already watched elsewhere. Instead of creating its own
identity, the film seems to follow a path that feels heavily inspired, making
the suspense less surprising than expected. It almost feels like the screenplay
believes that changing the character names is enough to make the audience
forget where they have seen similar scenes before.
Technically, Hari S R's background score supports the
thriller mood in several scenes, while the investigation portions maintain a
decent pace. Director Santhosh Raavanan deserves credit for choosing a
psychological thriller concept, but the execution misses the opportunity to
present something fresh. The supporting cast performs according to the script,
though the screenplay limits the emotional impact of many characters. Better
originality in the writing could have made the performances shine even more.
Overall, Andharan (The Hunter) starts with an interesting
murder mystery and features committed performances from Prajin Padmanabhan and
Ivana Varun. However, the film gradually loses its uniqueness as the narrative
becomes predictable and strongly resembles familiar psychological thrillers. If
you enjoy investigation dramas with emotional backstories, the film may offer a
watchable experience. But if you are expecting fresh twists and original
storytelling, this hunter may spend more time chasing old ideas than creating
new ones.
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