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Vishnu Vishal’s Aryan Movie Review


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movie Name :Aryan

Release Date : Nov 07, 2025
Digitpatrox Rating : 2.75/5
Starring : Vishnu Vishal, Selvaraghavan, Shraddha Srinath, Maanasa Choudhary, Avinash Y and others.
Director : Praveen K
Producers : Shubhra, Aryan Ramesh and Vishnu Vishal
Music Director : Ghibran Vaibodha
Cinematographer : Harish Kannan
Editor :  San Lokesh
Related Links : Trailer

Aaryan is a crime thriller released last week in Tamil and its Telugu version hit theaters today. Vishnu Vishal plays the main lead. Check the Review below to see how the film fares.

Story:

Athreya (Selvaraghavan) shocks everyone by killing himself during a live TV show. Before dying, he declares that a murder will occur each day for the next five days and leaves a clue that each victim’s name will be announced, and within an hour that person will be dead. The case lands on officer Nandi (Vishnu Vishal), who races to stop the plan as the killings begin exactly as warned. With the police struggling to understand the motive and identify possible accomplices, the movie unfolds around whether Athreya’s deadly blueprint plays out as intended and why these specific victims were chosen. Whether Nandi can break the cycle before the final name is revealed forms the rest of the Story.

Plus Points:

Aaryan opens with a striking hook where the criminal becomes his own first victim. Athreya killing himself on live television immediately pushes the Story into psychological territory and raises the question of what kind of man designs a murder spree he will never witness.

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The first half uses this setup effectively. The pacing is tight, clues drop at the right moments, and the murders unfold with precise timing. The director handles these sequences with good control and builds an atmosphere filled with tension and unpredictability.

The screenplay remains focused without unnecessary deviations. The murder set pieces stand out and the planning behind them keeps the audience engaged.

Vishnu Vishal delivers what the role requires. Since the Story drives the narrative more than the characters, neither he nor Selvaraghavan gets much scope for standout moments.

Minus Points:

The second half does not match the grip of the first. As the investigation progresses, the film begins to depend heavily on convenient logic. The police seem to access every possible data point within minutes, including digital records, UPI logs, banking activity, mobile tracking, personal information, and CCTV footage, yet they still fail to locate a victim within an hour. This makes the writing feel theoretical rather than believable.

The killer’s plan relies on the victims following fixed routines, and the film treats these routines as unchangeable. In reality, the chance of everything aligning at the exact time and place is extremely low. Thinking too much about these mechanics weakens the tension. To enjoy the film, you need to overlook these gaps and treat it as a fast paced thriller.

Shraddha Srinath’s character is introduced with strong buildup as a bold reporter but does not contribute much apart from delivering a final clue. Manasa Chaudhary, who plays Nandi’s wife, also gets a role that adds nothing significant. The personal life subplot feels unnecessary in a film that depends so much on pace and investigation.

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The climax and the final revelations lack the desired weight. The motive feels weak, slightly implausible, and too convenient for a Story built around psychological intensity.

Technical Aspects:

Debut director Praveen K comes in with a solid idea, but the writing does not fully match the ambition. The thematic point, which revolves around how predictable human routines can become vulnerabilities, is interesting but not explored deeply enough.

Ghibran’s score work in certain scenes but feel repetitive overall. Cinematography is decent and the production values are neat. Editing is sharp in the first half but needed more control in the second. Even after trimming the climax, the ending still feels a bit stretched.

Verdict:

On the whole, Aaryan is a crime thriller that works only in parts. The concept is interesting and the premise has enough pull, with well crafted murder sequences and a first half that moves at a good pace. However, the execution does not fully hold up. The second half suffers from logical looseness, underwritten characters, and a motive that lacks impact. If you are in for some tension and procedural buzz, the film offers a passable ride. But if you expect tight logic or a convincing payoff, it falls short. It begins with promise but ends on a diluted note. Better keep that in mind if you still plan to watch it.

Digitpatrox Rating: 2.75/5

Reviewed by Digitpatrox 


Review By: Digitpatrox

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