Antha Naal Movie Review: A scare story by numbers
Antha Naal Movie Review: Critics Rating: 2.5 stars, click to give your rating/review,Antha Naal is the kind of film that neither disappoints nor surprises, content to follow the horror
The Times of India,
TNN, Dec 13, 2024, 05.51 PM ISTCritic's Rating: 2.5/5Antha Naal Movie Synopsis: A filmmaker and his team’s creative retreat at an isolated villa takes a dark turn when they discover footage of a family’s violent end. Their night spirals into terror as masked killers emerge from the shadows, trapping them in a game linked to black magic.
Antha Naal Movie Review: Horror films set in isolated locations are now as common as jump scares in the dark - both of which Antha Naal serves up generously. The film tries to mix black magic and home invasion thrills, but too often falls back on familiar horror tropes.
The story follows Sree (Aryan Shyam), a filmmaker who, along with his assistants (Aadhya, Lima, and Rajkumar), heads to an isolated villa for story discussions. Their creative retreat quickly turns into a nightmare when they stumble upon a camera containing disturbing footage of a family of eight who met their doom in the same location. As eerie occurrences pile up and escape routes vanish, the team discovers they’re being hunted by masked killers lurking in the shadows. Behind these attacks lies a sinister cult disguised as a family, led by a patriarch and his three adopted sons, with motives rooted in black magic and human sacrifice.
The film treads a well-worn path in horror cinema, offering few surprises along the way. While the black magic angle promises something different, it feels more like set dressing than a crucial plot element. The found footage device - showing the previous family’s fate through discovered recordings - serves its purpose but adds to the growing list of horror movie clichés the film embraces rather than subverts. One benefit is the film’s brevity—it’s just 90 minutes long.
Aryan Shyam makes a decent debut as Sree in a dual dimensional grey shaded role. The supporting cast does what they can with their standard-issue horror movie characters - they’re there to react to scares and occasionally make questionable decisions that keep the plot moving. The technical aspects are competent enough - the isolated villa setting is appropriately atmospheric, and the cinematography makes good use of shadows and tight spaces. However, the scares rely too heavily on sudden loud noises; it feels repetitive.
Antha Naal is the kind of film that neither disappoints nor surprises, content to follow the horror playbook page by page.
Written By: Abhinav Subramanian