By revealing its villain early and grounding him in the quiet ordinariness of his life, the film creates an immediate tension that sharpens into a decisive standoff with a morally taut opponent.
Under the direction of Jithin K. Jose, Kalamkaval grows into a dark, absorbing tale of a hunter. Mammootty and Vinayakan lead the film with gripping performances that pull you straight into its uneasy world. What begins as a routine assignment on the Kerala–Tamil Nadu border slowly turns into a maze of missing women and a quiet predator who slips through towns like a shadow no one notices. Instead of relying on loud twists, the film focuses on the slow, tense pull between two sharp minds, one chasing justice and the other hiding in plain sight.
Drawing inspiration from the real life serial killer Cyanide Mohan, who was accused of twenty-five killings and convicted in twenty of them between 2013 and 2015, Kalamkaval enters a different narrative territory. The Hindi series Dahaad (2023), created by a women-led team, approached the same story from a wider lens, delving into the social forces that make certain women vulnerable: the weight placed on those considered beyond “marriageable age,” the isolation that follows, and the persistent shadows of caste, dowry, and patriarchy that shape their lives in painful ways. Kalamkaval chooses a different path. Rather than exploring the systemic roots that feed such horrors, it focuses on the two central figures. What defines Kalamkaval is not what it fails to do, but what it hints at doing with its moody landscapes, unsettling silences, and a lead actor turning villainy into an unsettlingly elegant performance. The film maintains a deliberate distance between the victims and their perpetrator, presenting their encounters with a matter-of-factness. Every woman who disappears, each with her own hopes, desires, and circle of loved ones, is only a mere entry in the growing count of lives undone, becoming another step in the lead character’s psychological descent and expanding crime spree. The way he approaches these women, earns their trust, and ultimately leads them to their deaths is unsettling in its simplicity. He does not depend on dramatic tricks or elaborate schemes. Instead, he uses small, calculated gestures that blend seamlessly into their lives, slipping into the fragile spaces where vulnerability meets hope.
Mammootty delivers a chilling performance where his calmness becomes its own form of terror. Vinayakan meets this energy with equal force in his restrained portrayal of Jayakrishnan. The supporting cast, particularly the women who appear in the victims’ roles, especially Shruti Ramachandran, leave sharp impressions despite limited screen time. Within the story, there is a point in the killer’s meticulous planning that recalls Drishyam 2 (2021).
Mujeeb Majeed’s music lends Kalamkaval much of its lingering unease. Among the film’s standout elements is the haunting track “Nilaa Kayum,” which becomes an eerie signature for the killer’s presence, where its soft, vintage lilt contrasts sharply with the brutality. The sound design never overstates or announces anything outright; instead, it lets quiet, carefully placed details build a sense of unease from beneath the surface.
The film closes without tidy answers, holding open the possibility that neither truth nor morality can be neatly resolved when both sides carry their own shadows.
3.5 stars
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