Kannathil Muthamittal May 2026

If you have not seen it, watch it alone, late at night, with no distractions. And when the title track plays over the closing credits—as Amudha walks away from the war, holding her adoptive mother’s hand, finally at peace—ask yourself: Where do we belong? And what are we willing to risk to find out?

The narrative follows Amudha (played with astonishing maturity by the late child actress P. S. Keerthana), a bright, talkative nine-year-old living in an idyllic upper-middle-class home in Chennai. Her parents, Thiruchelvan (Madhavan) and Indra (Simran), are a progressive, loving couple. But Amudha is unnervingly intelligent. She notices that she does not look like her parents. She catches whispers. When she finally confronts them, the truth explodes: She was adopted. Worse, her biological mother is a militant Tamil Tiger (LTTE) fighter trapped in the war zones of Northern Sri Lanka. Kannathil Muthamittal

A timeless 5/5. Essential viewing for any lover of world cinema. If you have not seen it, watch it

In a landscape of commercial cinema where songs are item numbers and villains are caricatures, Mani Ratnam created a piece of art that functions as a historical document, a parenting guide, and an anti-war anthem all at once. Her parents, Thiruchelvan (Madhavan) and Indra (Simran), are