Latest news with #Paramasivan


Pink Villa
06-07-2025
- Entertainment
- Pink Villa
Paramasivan Fathima OTT Release: Here's when and where to watch Tamil horror thriller starring Vimal, Chayadevi
Tamil horror film Paramasivan Fathima was released theatrically on June 6, 2025, and was rated A by the CBFC. The underlying theme of the inter-religious divide between communities was perceived as overhyped at the box office and received a mixed response from the audience. And now the film is all set to release on OTT. When and where to watch Paramasivan Fathima Paramasivan Fathima has now finally been released on OTT after completing its theatrical run. It is streaming on Aha Tamil and made its debut rather silently on the platform. The OTT giant shared a poster of the movie and wrote, 'Paramasivan Fathima vandhachu parunga! Watch #Paramasivanfathima streaming now on @ahatamil.' Official trailer and plot of Paramasivan Fathima The premise of the movie is set in the fictional world of Subramaniyapuram, which is split into two religious fragments, with a Muslim and Christian majority, respectively. The film opens in the middle of rampant conversations between the two communities, where grooms from both parts are mysteriously found dead right before their weddings. This narrative is paralleled by the story of Paramasivan and Fathima's romance, which hints at the prevalence of possible honor killing practices in the village. It is shown how their blossoming love is met with opposition from both their respective families, leading the couple to decide to elope for union. However, they are murdered and their plans foiled, leading to their vengeful spirits mercilessly attacking others with such a fate. Cast and crew of Paramasivan Fathima The film stars Vimal, Chayadevi, M.S Bhaskar, Cool Suresh, Sriranjani, Athira, Aruldoss, Veerasamar and others in key roles. It is written, directed, and produced by Esakki Karvannan under the banner of Lakshmi Creations. Deepan Chakravarthy has composed the musical score of the movie.


Time of India
05-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Time of India
Paramasivan Fathima Movie Review: Not all spirits are worth summoning
Paramasivan Fathima Movie Synopsis Two feuding villages, one Hindu and one Christian, face a series of murders that lead to the revelation of spirits seeking justice for past religious conflicts. Paramasivan Fathima Movie Review: Written By: Abhinav Subramanian Just when you thought Kollywood had exhausted its quota of caste-and-religion films, along comes Paramasivan Fathima to prove there's always room for one more. Set in feuding villages of Subramaniapuram (Hindu) and Yokopuram (Christian), the film opens with wedding night murders that have both communities pointing fingers. Director Esakki Karvannan (who also plays the police lead) handles religious themes with heavy-handed obviousness, reducing believers to caricatures who might as well be living in medieval times rather than modern first half establishes the murders with attempted comic sequences that fall flat. A man is lured to his death by following a singer he's attracted to into the forest - hardly the stuff of suspense. The police investigation aims for laughs that never land, making the whole enterprise feel tonally inevitable flashback reveals childhood sweethearts Paramasivan (Vimal) and Fathima ( Chaya Devi ) separated by religious conversion, Fathima's father's death and his dying wish to be buried as a Hindu, and the resulting burial ground disputes. Both Paramasivan and Fathima are murdered, and their grievances manifest as vengeful spirits. The film drags you through 140 minutes of village squabbling only to resolve everything with supernatural intervention - it's like watching grown adults argue over whose imaginary friend is and Chaya Devi do what they can with roles that require them to be both earthly teachers and ethereal avengers. MS Bhaskar's Father character is a collection of tired pastor clichés. The visuals are serviceable, though the sound design assaults you with unnecessary Fathima is the kind of film that thinks adding ghosts to rural conflicts automatically makes them interesting. It doesn't.