Movies
The sound of her stillness
Recently featured at KIMFF, ‘Kottukkaali’ shows how casteism can undermine love, autonomy, and truth.
Sanskriti Pokharel
Directed by PS Vinothraj, ‘Kottukkaali’ is a moving, slow-burning film.
It tells the story of a young woman who dares to say ‘no’ in a world that only accepts ‘yes.’ More importantly, it asks us: What happens when a woman refuses to obey, and how far will society go to make her submit?
The story begins in a rural village in Tamil Nadu. Meena (Anna Ben) refuses to marry Pandi (Soori) because she is already in love with a man from a lower-caste family. Her refusal confuses and embarrasses her family. But instead of asking why she said no, they jump to the conclusion that she must be possessed.
So, they take her to a local shaman to “cure” her. What follows is a road trip, both literal and emotional, filled with discomfort, silence, and subtle explosions of tension. It’s a story not of high drama, but of everyday cruelty disguised as care.
‘Kottukkaali’ doesn’t give you punchy dialogues or flashy music. There are long moments of silence, of people just walking and sitting. But that stillness holds weight. Director Vinothraj uses the silence to reflect how women like Meena are often not allowed to speak, or if they do, they are not believed.
The loudest things in this film are not said, they are implied. A glance, a pause, a refusal to answer, they all carry meaning.
Anna Ben gives a brilliant performance. She hardly speaks, yet we can feel everything she is going through, from the confusion, anger, fear, and, above all, her strength. Meena’s silence is not a weakness. It is her resistance.
Soori, who usually plays the funny man in Tamil films, surprises everyone here. As Pandi, he plays a man who thinks he is entitled to Meena’s love simply because he’s been told so all his life. His character shows how even well-meaning men can turn possessive and violent when women reject them.
At its core, this film is not just about one girl and one man. It’s about the patriarchal system that decides what women should do, who they should marry, how they should behave and what should happen to them if they don’t follow those rules.
By calling Meena ‘mad’ or ‘possessed,’ her family avoids confronting the truth: she doesn’t want to marry someone she didn’t choose. But in a society where caste, family honour, and tradition matter more than personal choice, Meena’s simple ‘no’ becomes a threat.
The cinematography deserves praise. The dusty roads, the dry trees, and the open fields reflect the characters’ emotional landscapes. The visuals are raw, grounded, and honest. There is hardly any background music to tell us how to feel. Instead, we hear the sounds of nature, the rustle of wind and birds chirping, which make the scenes feel even more intimate and alive.

One symbolic scene shows a rooster tied up and struggling to escape. It perfectly mirrors Meena’s situation—restrained, misunderstood, yet still fiercely alive.
‘Kottukkaali’ is about choice. It’s about a woman saying, ‘I don’t want this,’ and a community not knowing how to accept that. It’s about how often people confuse care with control, love with ownership, and tradition with truth.
It also tells us something important: madness is not always in the mind. Sometimes, the world calls you mad simply because you don’t fit in. Meena is not sick. She is just strong. And that strength frightens people.
Additionally, ‘Kottukkaali’ is not a film for those looking for fast-paced entertainment. It is slow, meditative, and emotionally intense. But it is also brave, honest, and necessary.
It reminds us that rebellion doesn’t always look like protest. Sometimes, it looks like a girl sitting quietly and refusing to speak because she has already said everything she needs to, and no one listened. All in all, it’s a film that gives silence a voice.
Kottukkaali
Director: PS Vinothraj
Cast: Anna Ben, Soori
Duration: 100 minutes
Year: 2024
Language: Tamil