Thanal: 2025 Tamil Action Thriller Film Trailer, Review & Songs

Thanal: 2025 Tamil Action Thriller Film Trailer, Review & Songs

Movie Name: Thanal
Directed by: Ravindra Madhava
Starring: Atharvaa, Ashwin Kakumanu, Lavanya Tripathi, Shah Ra, Barani, Selva, Azhagam Perumal, Bose Venkat, Lakshmi Priyaa Chandramouli, Bhaarath, Thoufiq, Sarvhaa, Pradeep K. Vijayan
Genre: ActionDramaThriller
Release Date: 12 September, 2025
Language: Tamil
Running Time: 128 Minutes
Rating:
Production Companies: Annai Film Production
Budget: ₹- crore

Thanal: Movie Overview

Thanal is an upcoming Indian Tamil-language action thriller film directed by Ravindra Madhava in his debut. The film is produced by Annai Film Production starring Atharvaa and Lavanya Tripathi in the lead roles alongside Ashwin Kakumanu.

Thanal is scheduled to release in theatres on 12 September 2025.

After Pattathu Arasan (2022), in early-February 2023, Atharvaa was announced to feature in his next film titled Thanal directed by Ravindra Madhava in his debut. The film is produced by Annai Film Production. The film stars Ashwin Kakumanu in his debut as the antagonist, alongside Lavanya Tripathi. The technical team consists of Justin Prabhakaran as its music composer, Sakthi Saravanan as its cinematographer and Kalaivanan as its editor.

Thanal is scheduled to release in theatres on 12 September 2025. Earlier it was scheduled for 29 August 2025.

Movie Trailer:

Movie Review:

Thanal Movie Review: A lean thriller trapped by old tropes

Thanal Movie Synopsis:

An outsider with a grudge targets cops tied to a past encounter, and a rookie lured into his sewer-linked heist tries to shut it down.

Thanal Movie Review:

Thanal is most alive when it sticks to the chase and least convincing when it stops to explain itself. It opens with a 2016 police encounter that wipes a gang of bank robbers; a year later, a stranger (Ashwin) hunts down those officers. On his first night in uniform, a recruit (Atharvaa) chases one of his underlings from a manhole into a deserted housing site, loses colleagues, and uncovers a sewer-routed multi-bank heist, realising he was bait. With Anu (Lavanya) taken as leverage, the revenge circles back to a mining land grab and police complicity.

The film wants urgency from the first frame, yet the opening encounter is staged in a way that drains belief. The blocking is slack, the reactions feel performed rather than lived, and the shock never lands. A little later, an all-powerful antagonist strolls through a squad of trained cops. Not impossible in a movie, but here it plays like ritual: one-man army, others wait their turn, a mid-fight monologue. Style points over stakes.

That inconsistency haunts the action grammar. Fights pause so people can talk. Exposition barges into tense beats. The film keeps asking for buy-in while undercutting the make-believe. The villain’s grievance has real-world weight on paper, but the writing tries to launder a terrorist playbook into tragic inevitability without doing the character work. It wants you to feel the burn and forgive the arson in the same breath.

Where Thanal finds its groove is when the cops get stuck in the deserted housing board sprawl. The tight corridors and the way night swallows sightlines provide a proper stage for a chase film. Production design and staging do the heavy lifting. Atharvaa has always had the looks and chops, and he brings a steady presence here. Ashwin has the glare and command, even if the script does not back him with a persuasive arc. Lavanya is stuck in utility mode. Shah Ra chips in with buddy beats that land cleanly, mostly because the comedy is kept on a short leash. Lakshmi Priya, as the wary local who shelters the survivors, adds texture in a few scenes.

Craft is a mixed bag. The cinematography enjoys the hard edges of the maze and the grime of the underground. The romance detour exists because habit says so. The moral calculus is explained when it should be felt. There is a sharper thriller hiding inside this one. The blueprint is right there in the tunnels: keep it focused, keep it urgent, and stop stopping to explain. When Thanal runs, you lean in. When it reasons, you drift.

Check Also

They Will Kill You: 2026 American Action Comedy Horror Film

They Will Kill You: 2026 American Action Comedy Horror Film Trailer & Review

Movie Name: They Will Kill You Directed by: Kirill Sokolov Starring: Zazie Beetz, Myha’la, Paterson …