Kingston Movie Review: Visually striking but narratively adrift
Kingston Movie Review: Critics Rating: 2.5 stars, click to give your rating/review,The muddled screenplay struggles to clearly communicate its complex mythology through dialogue that
The Times of India,
TNN, Mar 6, 2025, 08.35 PM ISTCritic's Rating: 2.5/5Kingston Movie Synopsis: In a coastal village haunted by a decades-old maritime curse, a reckless smuggler defies warnings to lead his friends into forbidden waters, where ancient horrors await beneath the waves.
Kingston Movie Review: Nothing deflates a seafaring horror faster than skeletons that can’t seem to skeletonize anyone—leaving Kingston adrift in unnecessarily stormy narrative waters. Set in fictitious Thoovattur village near Thoothukudi, this maritime adventure follows Kingston (G.V. Prakash), a smuggler working for local kingpin Thomas until he discovers they’re trafficking drugs instead of mere sea cucumbers. When a young recruit named Benjamin is killed during a coast guard chase, Kingston begins questioning his allegiance to Thomas. After his girlfriend Divya (Divya Bharathi) is kidnapped, Kingston ventures into waters supposedly cursed since 1982, where he confronts the truth about his grandfather Solomon's (Chetan Kadambi) involvement in a gold treasure conspiracy and the wrongful demonization of an innocent man named Bose.
The muddled screenplay struggles to clearly communicate its complex mythology through dialogue that shifts between contemporary and regional dialect. Director Kalam Prakash shows considerable visual flair, particularly in the perpetually stormy nighttime sequences that establish an appropriately foreboding atmosphere. The sound design is deafening, with non-stop soundtrack cues that desperately try to manufacture epicness.
When supernatural elements finally arrive, they come with suitable dramatic fanfare – skeletal apparitions and ghoulish figures emerge from fog-shrouded waters in visually striking sequences. Their menace is a bit of a disappointment though - like, couldn’t they at least dismember one crew mate? Come on!
G.V. Prakash delivers a solid performance, convincingly evolving from carefree smuggler to determined hero. His supporting shipmates, though somewhat underdeveloped, provide the necessary dramatic reactions as the paranormal activity escalates around them.
Perhaps the most haunting thing about Kingston isn’t its spirits but the glimpses of what it could have been. In those brief moments when the visual craftsmanship aligns with genuine maritime dread, you almost forget you’re watching greedy grandpas masquerading as underwhelming ghosts.
Written By: Abhinav Subramanian