The Beginning (of Your Regret)
Every now and then, a horror movie comes along that makes you question not only the supernatural but also the sanity of everyone involved in making it. Airaa, a 2019 Tamil-language “horror” film by KM Sarjun, proudly joins that ghostly pantheon — a cinematic séance gone wrong where the scariest thing isn’t the ghost but the screenplay.
Starring the supremely talented Nayanthara — who, in a cruel twist of fate, has to play two characters in this mess — Airaa is a film so desperate to be profound that it drowns itself in its own melodrama, like a haunted soap opera caught in a feedback loop of bad decisions.
It’s called Airaa, which means “The Beginning.” Ironically, that’s also the point at which the audience begins praying for The End.
Plot: Fifty Shades of Confusion
The movie opens with Yamuna (Nayanthara, Role #1), a journalist who runs away from home to avoid an arranged marriage — because nothing says “modern woman” like fleeing to your grandma’s haunted house.
There, she meets her grandmother Parvathy, a YouTube sidekick named Mani (Yogi Babu, tragically wasted), and Mani’s nephew Babloo — who, surprise, turns out to be a ghost. If this sounds like a spoiler, don’t worry — the movie practically announces it with neon signs.
Yamuna starts filming fake ghost videos for YouTube (because sure, journalism is overrated). But soon she’s haunted by a real ghost named Bhavani — also played by Nayanthara (Role #2), because why hire another actor when you can just double the confusion?
Meanwhile, Amudhan (Kalaiyarasan), a man with all the charisma of a disinterested tax auditor, investigates a string of mysterious deaths. He’s trying to figure out who’s killing everyone, but we’re too busy trying to figure out what’s happening.
The plot unravels — literally — when we discover that Bhavani’s ghost wants revenge, Yamuna’s fake videos somehow made real ghosts angry, and everyone’s backstory involves trauma, bad parenting, and conveniently timed lightning strikes.
The film jumps from haunted house to tragic love story to revenge thriller to spiritual self-help seminar. By the halfway point, it’s less “horror” and more “PowerPoint presentation about reincarnation with jump scares.”
The Dual Role Dilemma: Twice the Talent, Half the Logic
Nayanthara does her best to carry the movie, but even she can’t save Airaa from its own existential crisis. As Yamuna, she plays a modern, rational woman who somehow decides the best way to confront a haunting is by Googling it. As Bhavani, she’s the eternal victim — dark-skinned, mistreated, and literally struck by lightning.
Yes, lightning. That’s the movie’s explanation for why her entire village thinks she’s cursed. Forget character development — just zap her with divine electricity and call it a metaphor.
Nayanthara’s acting oscillates between “I’m too good for this” and “I’ve emotionally checked out.” And who can blame her? She’s performing opposite herself in a story where ghosts hold grudges over missed elevator rides.
That’s right — the central tragedy of Airaa hinges on Yamuna not holding an elevator door open for Bhavani, which indirectly causes Bhavani’s death. You heard that correctly. Forget exorcisms — the moral of this film is “be polite in elevators.”
The Horror: Ghosts by Way of Glitch Effects
For a film about fear, Airaa is surprisingly afraid of being scary. Every scene that should terrify instead looks like a YouTube tutorial on “How to Add Smoke Effects in Adobe After Effects.”
We get the usual suspects: flickering lights, mirrors that reflect ghosts, a haunted butterfly that flaps around like it’s lost, and a soundtrack that confuses “loud” with “scary.”
The jump scares are so predictable that you could set your watch by them. Ghostly apparitions appear with the grace of an amateur magician yelling, “Ta-da!” Meanwhile, every time you start to feel a flicker of suspense, the film cuts to another flashback about how society mistreats women.
Which, don’t get me wrong, is an important topic — but not when it’s presented with the subtlety of a sledgehammer wrapped in social commentary.
The Characters: Everyone Needs an Exorcism (or a Script Editor)
Let’s start with Amudhan. His main job in this movie is to look sad, say Bhavani’s name dramatically, and show up just in time to do absolutely nothing. He’s the human equivalent of a slow Wi-Fi connection: always buffering, never delivering.
Yamuna’s grandmother, Parvathy, exists solely to die conveniently so the plot can feel emotions. Mani, the comic relief, provides none — his jokes land with the impact of a haunted feather. And poor Babloo, the ghost child, is less creepy and more like Casper after a bad day.
Then there’s Bhavani’s tragic backstory, which plays out like a Lifetime movie written by someone who learned empathy from a Wikipedia summary. She’s abused, rejected, shamed, and finally killed by a drunk truck driver — because apparently, subtlety also got hit by that lorry.
The Social Message: A Serious Film in a Silly Costume
To be fair, Airaa wants to say something meaningful. It tries to tackle colorism, class prejudice, and misogyny — noble goals, all of them. But these themes are buried under layers of supernatural nonsense and overwrought dialogue.
It’s as if the filmmakers thought, “What if we made The Conjuring woke?” and then forgot to make it coherent.
The idea that society’s cruelty can create monsters is interesting — but when your villain’s motivation boils down to “a journalist didn’t hold the elevator,” the metaphor kind of collapses.
And the final act, where Yamuna “redeems” herself by literally offering her body to Bhavani, is less empowering and more “Please end this movie.”
The Ending: Death, Possession, and Pointlessness
By the time the finale rolls around, logic has packed its bags and left. Bhavani possesses Yamuna’s body to marry Amudhan (who still somehow doesn’t recognize that his fiancée is a walking corpse). But when he realizes he’s about to marry a ghost, he decides to kill himself.
Yes, this man’s grand romantic gesture is suicide. Because apparently, death is the new dating app.
The movie ends with Bhavani and Amudhan together in the afterlife, while Yamuna mourns over their graves. And just when you think it’s finally over, a CGI butterfly floats across the screen — a final, fluttering reminder that the film had symbolism it never fully understood.
Technicals: When Production Value Meets Paranormal Boredom
Visually, Airaa looks like it had a decent budget — unfortunately, it spent most of it on fog machines and eyeliner. The cinematography tries hard to be atmospheric but mostly feels like someone dimmed the lights and hoped for the best.
The music, composed with the precision of a man hitting random keys on a haunted harmonium, screams “Tension!” even during emotional monologues. By the time the end credits roll, your ears need an exorcism.
The Final Verdict: Ghost Story Meets PowerPoint Presentation
Airaa could have been a strong, socially conscious horror film — a story about trauma, prejudice, and redemption. Instead, it’s a bloated soap opera wearing a ghost costume and tripping over its own metaphors.
The pacing is glacial, the tone inconsistent, and the writing so heavy-handed it could haunt its own sequel. Nayanthara tries valiantly, but even she can’t breathe life into a story that’s already been buried under exposition.
The scariest part of Airaa isn’t the ghost — it’s the realization that this movie is two and a half hours long.
Rating: 1.5 out of 5 haunted butterflies.
Because while Airaa promises “The Beginning,” what you’ll really experience is the beginning of a very long nap — occasionally interrupted by the sound of a ghost yelling, “Boo!” and your own inner voice whispering, “Why am I still watching this?”
