Harry
Kaliyugam (2025) is one of those movies that just yanks you by the collar and drops you into the middle of chaos. Harry’s at the center of it all—he’s not your squeaky-clean hero, more like a guy who’s been through the wringer and is still standing, barely. In this world, everything’s sliding off the rails. Tech is running wilder than people, society’s morals are shot, and honestly, nobody even pretends to play by the old rules anymore.
Harry’s got his own baggage—family drama, trust issues, and a past that keeps biting at his heels. The city around him? It’s a neon-soaked mess, full of desperate folks and shady deals. You’ve got politicians making promises they never plan to keep, corporate suits pulling strings behind the scenes, and regular people just trying to get through the day without getting crushed. It’s got that gritty, “are we even the good guys?” kind of energy.
The plot weaves through riots, betrayals, and some seriously sketchy alliances. Harry’s trying to do the right thing, or at least what seems right in a world where right and wrong are totally bent out of shape. Every choice feels like a trap. The stakes keep ratcheting up—personal, political, existential, you name it. By the end, you’re not even sure what winning looks like. It’s messy, raw, and weirdly real. Kaliyugam doesn’t pull punches. It’s just relentless, man.