Sirai UA

25 Dec, 2025
2 hrs 26 mins
3.5/5
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Sirai Movie Review : Vikram Prabhu carries a grounded procedural drama

Critic's Rating: 3.5/5
Sirai Movie Synopsis: A constable escorts a prisoner from Vellore jail to Sivagangai court, uncovering systemic failures through flashbacks.

Sirai Movie Review: Prison dramas live or die on whether they make you care about the people trapped inside them. Sirai manages this partly through Vikram Prabhu's restrained performance and partly through its focus on procedural realism over melodrama, though the latter still sneaks in more than necessary. Set between 1997 and 2002, the film follows Constable Kathiravan (Vikram Prabhu) as he escorts prisoner Abdul (LK Akshay Kumar) from Vellore jail to Sivagangai court. The journey becomes the canvas for exploring how the system grinds people down through indifference and prejudice.

What works best here is the understatement. Police procedurals for that era get depicted without fanfare: convict escorts, overcrowded court hearings where cases are essentially pre-decided tick marks, officers carrying their own biases into every interaction. These aren't new observations, but director Suresh Rajakumari presents them with enough honesty that they register. Vikram Prabhu anchors this with subtle work, conveying internal conflict without telegraphing every emotion. His character operates on a simple philosophy: speak up or get run over. At pivotal moments, that quiet courage lifts wavering officers around him, pulling them toward doing the right thing even when it's risky.

The flashbacks revealing Abdul's backstory are where things stumble. The setup feels overly familiar: a Muslim family in a predominantly Hindu village, religious prejudice erupting into violence, an abusive alcoholic antagonist. Abdul's lover comes from a household where her brother-in-law terrorizes everyone, and the conflicts that push the plot forward rely heavily on convenient timing. When Abdul's girlfriend gets caught by her drunk brother-in-law while receiving cash and jewels from her sister to elope, you can't help but roll your eyes at the ease of it all. The scuffle between her father, Abdul, and his mother escalates in predictably tragic fashion, landing as another familiar beat.

The film tugs hard at heartstrings, sometimes sacrificing character depth for emotional manipulation. You sense the story wants you to feel things more than it wants to develop these people beyond their narrative functions. LK Akshay Kumar does what he can with Abdul, but the character remains somewhat flat despite good intentions.

Still, these missteps are outweighed by Vikram Prabhu's performance and the film's procedural honesty.

Written By:
Abhinav Subramanian

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