Puja Deb

Idi Mazha Kaattu (2025) drops you right into the thick of monsoon-soaked chaos, where nothing’s really as it seems. The story circles around Meera, a no-nonsense meteorologist who’s obsessed with chasing storms—literally and metaphorically. She lands up in a sleepy Kerala town, supposedly for research, but you can smell her desperation to escape her own mess back in the city. People in this town? They’re quirky as hell—old-timers who swear the rain’s got a mind of its own, a local cop who’d rather quote poetry than file reports, and this mysterious kid who keeps showing up whenever the rain turns wild. Anyway, Meera starts connecting the dots between strange weather patterns and a series of oddball incidents—missing pets, weird dreams, all that jazz. There’s this undercurrent of tension, with everyone hiding something. And the rain, man, it’s practically a character itself, slamming down whenever secrets are about to spill. Romance? Oh, it’s tangled. Meera’s got chemistry with the poetic cop, but she’s also haunted by memories of a past relationship that ended in tragedy. As the monsoon intensifies, so do the stakes. People’s secrets bubble up, old wounds reopen, and Meera’s forced to face not just the storm outside, but the one inside her own head. By the end, it’s less about the weather and more about survival, forgiveness, and finally letting go. The whole thing’s soaked in atmosphere—think lush visuals, moody music, and a vibe that lingers.

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  • Professions: Actor

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