Kaantha transports viewers into the charged, smoke-filled studios of 1950s Madras, delivering a riveting period drama where creativity and ambition collide. Directed by Selvamani Selvaraj, the film resists the temptation of treating old-world cinema as a glossy memory. Instead, it presents the industry as a volatile arena—one where egos clash, alliances crumble, and reputations hang by a thread.
At the heart of this tension is the relationship between a legendary Tamil filmmaker, Ayya, and the star he once discovered and shaped, T. K. Mahadevan. Their mentor-protégé dynamic fractures when Mahadevan, now a celebrated actor with an inflated sense of power, attempts to commandeer Ayya’s new female-centric film. His unilateral decision to rename the project Shaantha to Kaantha—reshaping the narrative to suit his heroic persona—sparks a creative and emotional war that exposes deep-rooted insecurities and long-suppressed bitterness.
Dulquer Salmaan and Rana Daggubati anchor the film with compelling performances that capture both the grandeur and the fragility of fame. Selvaraj’s direction embraces the era’s heightened dramatic style, turning theatrical dialogue and expressive acting into deliberate, evocative tools.
Though whispers have tied the story to M. K. Thyagaraja Bhagavathar’s life, the makers affirm that Kaantha stands firmly as an original, fictional tragedy crafted with authenticity and ambition.

