Amal
Idi Mazha Kaattu (2025) sweeps you into the heart of Kerala during the relentless monsoon season, where rain isn’t just weather—it’s practically a character in the story. Amal, a guy who’s more at home in chaos than calm, finds himself stuck in his childhood village after a wild series of events. The whole place is flooded, and with roads cut off, the villagers are forced into tight quarters—literally and emotionally.
Amal’s return isn’t exactly a hero’s welcome. Old family grudges bubble up, and there’s this tension with his estranged father that you can practically feel through the screen. The rain won’t let up, making everything muddier, both outside and in people’s hearts. In the middle of all this, Amal reconnects with his childhood friend, Nila, who’s become this fierce, no-nonsense organizer, rallying everyone to keep the community afloat—sometimes literally.
Through waterlogged days and sleepless, thunder-soaked nights, Amal has to face the stuff he’s been running from—his own mistakes, broken relationships, and the raw vulnerability that comes when you can’t hide behind city lights or distractions anymore. The cinematography is lush and moody; you’ll almost feel the dampness seeping off the screen. Idi Mazha Kaattu is less about the rain and more about what it washes up—regret, forgiveness, and those rare, shining moments when people actually come together, despite the storm.