Nag Rajini Raj
Nag Rajini Raj strides back onto the scene in Lamp (2025), a film that doesn’t just flicker in the background—it blazes. The story orbits around Arjun, a guy who’s honestly just trying to keep his head above water in a world that seems to throw curveballs for breakfast. He’s a mechanic by trade, runs a little workshop tucked in the chaos of a bustling city, and honestly, he’d rather tinker with engines than deal with people’s nonsense. But life, as always, has other plans.
One rainy night, a mysterious old man drops off a battered, antique lamp at Arjun’s garage, muttering something cryptic and vanishing like a bad dream. At first, Arjun's just annoyed. Another broken thing to fix. But when he finally gets the lamp to spark back to life, all hell breaks loose—think visions, weird flashes of the past, whispers that don’t belong to this world. Suddenly, he’s knee-deep in a mess involving a decades-old family feud, secrets that were way better left buried, and a handful of people who’d kill for the lamp’s secret.
Through all the madness, Arjun gets dragged out of his comfort zone, forced to face his own demons (and a few real ones, maybe). The film swings between gritty city drama and supernatural chaos, dropping in some sly humor and gut-punch emotion. Lamp isn’t just about fixing what’s broken—it’s about realizing some things were never whole to begin with. Buckle up. This one doesn’t just shine, it burns.