Varunan Movie Review: Water wars that barely make a splash
Varunan Movie Review: Critics Rating: 2.0 stars, click to give your rating/review, Varunan hints at the film it could have been—a glimpse of clarity quickly muddied by convention. Li
The Times of India,
TNN, Mar 14, 2025, 09.41 AM ISTCritic's Rating: 2.0/5Varunan Movie Synopsis: A territorial war erupts between two rival water supply businesses when one begins hiding illicit arrack beneath their water cans. Petty squabbles escalate into violent confrontations as loyalties are tested and betrayals mount.
Varunan Movie Review: The God of Water deserved better than this tepid tale of men arguing over plastic cans. Director Jaayavelmurugun’s Varunan - a tale of North Chennai water suppliers battling for territory plays like a greatest hits compilation of Kollywood’s most exhausted tropes. Ayyavu (Radharavi) and his workers Thillai (Dhushyanth Jayaprakash) and Marudhu (Priyadharsan) square off against the duplicitous John (Charanraj), his greedy wife Raani (Maheshwari), and her thuggish brother Dabba (Shankarnag Vijayan), who hide illicit arrack beneath water cans while a corrupt cop (Jiva Ravi) circles like a vulture.
The plot, such as it is, escalates from petty territorial squabbles to predictable betrayals and eventual bloodshed, without ever making us care who controls which street’s hydration. The screenplay trudges through formulaic confrontations (“This is our area!”), romantic subplots that went stale around 2003—Agni (Haripriya) and Marudhu’s courtship being a prime example—and regional stereotyping passed off as character development. When Thillai declares “This is how Thirunelveli men treat others!” with chest-thumping pride, the audience laughs - not for the right reasons. Between these conflicts, songs arrive with clockwork predictability.
Dhushyanth embodies the rural youth aesthetic that Thillai demands, his and Gabriela’s unmistakably youthful appearances betraying the film’s extended shelf life before release. Radharavi delivers gravitas on autopilot, while Charanraj’s villain performs villainy by numbers.
In its better moments, Varunan hints at the film it could have been—a glimpse of clarity quickly muddied by convention. Like its water cans, the potential remains sealed.
Written By: Abhinav Subramanian