| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Title | Avìhïthàm |
| Release Year | 2025 |
| Language | Malayalam |
| Genre | Dark Comedy, Drama |
| Director | Senna Hegde |
| Writer | Senna Hegde, Ambareesh Kalathera |
| Main Cast | Unni Raj, Renji Kankol, Vrinda Menon, Vineeth Chakyar |
| Runtime | 105–106 minutes |
| Theme | Gossip, Moral policing, Hypocrisy |
| OTT/Digital | JioHotstar (from 14 Nov 2025) |
| Theatrical Release | 10 Oct 2025 (India) |
Avihitham slated for 2025 emerges as a provocative Malayalam‑language film that blends dark comedy with sharp social commentary. Directed by Senna Hegde, and co-written with Ambareesh Kalathera, the film dives into themes of morality, gossip and hypocrisy in a small village community.
Film Essentials
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Title & Meaning: The title “Avihitham” translates roughly to “illicit” or “unlawful”a word commonly used in Malayalam to denote extramarital affairs or socially condemned relationships.
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Director & Writers: Senna Hegde; screenplay co-written with Ambareesh Kalathera based on his story.
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Cast & Crew: Features actors like Unni Raj, Renji Kankol, Vrinda Menon, Vineeth Chakyar, and others. Cinematography by Sreeraj Raveendran and Ramesh Mathews; edited by Sanath Sivaraj; music by Sreerag Saji.
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Release Info: Theatrically released on 10 October 2025 (India), with a digital premiere on JioHotstar from 14 November 2025.
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Genre & Runtime: A black comedy‑drama runtime approximately 105–106 minutes.
Plot Gossip, Moral Policing and Hypocrisy
At its core, Avihitham revolves around a scandalous rumor in a tight‑knit village. The story begins with Prakashan a jobless villager who, while returning from a late‑night outing, witnesses what appears to be a clandestine meeting between a young man and woman. Troubled by what he believes is an illicit affair, he shares the information with his friend Venu, a tailor who claims he can identify people even by their shadows and vague physical cues.
Their suspicions snowball into full‑fledged “investigation,” dragging in more villagers. With each layer of gossip, judgment, and speculation, the film strips away the veneer of morality to reveal:
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The absurdity and danger of moral policing in conservative societies
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The fragility of reputation in environments where gossip holds more power than truth
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How male ego and collective judgement can warp reality, lead to misinterpretation, and destroy lives
By using humor, irony, and tight social realism, Avihitham cleverly satirizes how a community obsessed with “right and wrong” can become judge, jury, and executioner, all without solid evidence.
Reception and Critical Note
Critics have described Avihitham as “a smart, steady satire that observes more than it surprises.” s While some point out its pacing is slow in the first half, the film gains momentum as communal hysteria escalates, culminating in a payoff that is both biting and darkly funny.
Prominent writer NS Madhavan praised the film for tackling “two enduring Malayali maladies moral policing and marital suspicion,” calling it a “layered film with echoes of the Ramayana that lingers.”
Though the subject matter extramarital affair, suspicion, gossip is heavy, Avihitham handles it with subtlety, satire, and a certain realism that avoids melodrama while delivering social commentary through grounded narratives.
Why Avihitham Matters: Relevance & Social Mirror
In a world where social media, rumors, and judgment often precede facts, Avihitham resonates beyond its village setting. It mirrors real societal dynamics how rumors spread, how communities judge without knowing full truth and questions the validity of so-called “morality” enforced by public opinion.
For viewers who appreciate cinema that reflects society’s flaws, evokes introspection, and challenges deeply ingrained prejudices Avihitham offers a compelling experience.
In short, Avihitham is more than just a movie: it’s a mirror one that forces you to ask: “Who decides what’s illicit and on what grounds?”