Reviews
Aaromaley – Movie Review !
Cast: கிஷன் தாஸ், ஹர்ஷத் கான், ஷிவாத்மிகா ராஜசேகர், மேகா ஆகாஷ், VTV கணேஷ், துலசி, சந்தானபாரதி, சிபி ஜெயகுமார், நம்ரிதா MV, சந்தியா வின்ஃப்ரெட் மற்றும் பலர்.
Production: மினி ஸ்டுடியோ
Director: சரங் தியாகு
Screenplay: பிரவீன் ஆன்டனி
Cinematography: கவுதம் ராஜேந்திரன்
Editing: பிரவீன் ஆன்டனி
Music: சித்து குமார
Language: தமிழ்
Runtime: 2H 07Mins
Release Date: November 7th 2025
The film follows Ajith (Kishen Das), a self-proclaimed hopeless romantic who has grown up believing that love should feel like a Tamil movie. For him, true romance means grand gestures, sweeping emotions, and the kind of “movie magic” that defines cinematic love stories.
His ideals are challenged when he joins a matrimony agency and meets Anjali (Shivathmika Rajashekar), a practical woman who views on-screen romance as pure fantasy. Where Ajith seeks passion, Anjali values pragmatism. As they help others find matches, their own contrasting beliefs about love force them to ask a simple but powerful question — does real love need drama, or just honesty and understanding?
Sarang Thiagu, who co-wrote the screenplay with Kishen Das, directs with confidence and clarity. His storytelling feels fresh even as it draws inspiration from the romantic grammar of Gautham Menon and Mani Ratnam. He uses the familiar framework of Tamil urban romance only to deconstruct it, turning the genre’s clichés into moments of reflection and humor.
The film moves at an easy, engaging pace, blending comedy with genuine emotional beats. Silambarasan TR’s charming voiceover adds nostalgic texture, referencing his own iconic romantic roles while setting the tone for this generation’s love story.
Kishen Das delivers a finely tuned performance as Ajith — vulnerable, sincere, and occasionally naïve, yet never caricatured. He gives the character a quiet innocence that makes his belief in cinematic love feel real. His chemistry and comic timing with Shivathmika Rajashekar are effortless.
Shivathmika, in turn, is exceptional as Anjali. Her portrayal of a no-nonsense realist never slips into harshness; instead, she brings emotional clarity and depth to a character grounded in practicality. She anchors the film with her measured screen presence.
Among the supporting cast, Harshath Khan stands out as Sachin, Ajith’s witty friend and comedic counterpart. His timing ensures the lighter moments land naturally. VTV Ganesh brings warmth and restraint as Narasimhan, a mentor figure whose own late-in-life romance adds a tender, multi-generational dimension to the story.
Siddhu Kumar’s music is a major strength — especially the catchy, well-placed “Eppadi Vandhayo”, which enhances the film’s emotional rhythm. Gautham Rajendran’s cinematography gives the film a sleek, vibrant look, capturing both the bustle of city life and the intimacy of quiet moments.
Despite a few minor pacing dips, the film maintains a consistently engaging tone. It’s charming without being cloying, modern without being cynical.
In the end, Ajith and Anjali’s story isn’t about rejecting movie romance — it’s about finding something truer behind the screen magic.
Rating : 3/5