Introduction
Breakups have always hurt — but in the Instagram era, they also trend. Pookie taps into this generational angst, packaging heartbreak as viral content, relatable memes, and painfully familiar post-breakup spirals. Directed by Ganesh Chandra, who also handles cinematography, the film positions itself squarely for the digital-age audience.
It understands its demographic. The bigger question is whether it understands emotional consequence just as well.
Storyline
Kailash (Ajay Dhishan) and Aazhi (RK Dhanusha) have been together for six years when a seemingly minor road rage incident detonates their relationship. Kailash chases down a driver who damages his mirror, gets into a public fight while Aazhi pleads with him to stop. She slaps him in frustration. He slaps her back. Someone records it. The clip goes viral.
Overnight, they become “that couple.”
They split, and the film unfolds in parallel timelines — two people coping badly in very different ways. Kailash buries himself in gym sessions and bro talk. Aazhi drifts into questionable decisions, including a humiliating detour involving an ashram scam.
The narrative moves through vignette-style sequences — hyper-fixation on distractions, rebound attempts that fail, petty arguments that grow heavier in retrospect. When these segments land, they hit with a sharp sting of recognition.
Performance Highlights
- Ajay Dhishan brings easy screen presence and natural charm. His performance feels lived-in, particularly in quieter moments of regret.
- RK Dhanusha matches him with emotional warmth and vulnerability. She convincingly portrays confusion and heartbreak.
- Supporting performances from Shiyara and Vivek Prasanna add texture to the world.
- A quirky touch involving street dogs with inner comic voices unexpectedly delivers some of the film’s lightest laughs.
The cast carries the emotional weight effectively, even when the screenplay feels uneven.
Technical Brilliance
🎵 Music by Vijay Antony is a strong pillar. The background score stitches together the emotional beats, adding rhythm and mood without overwhelming the scenes.
🎥 Ganesh Chandra’s cinematography keeps the storytelling brisk and visually modern. The pacing ensures none of the vignettes drag, maintaining audience engagement throughout.
The film’s visual and sonic polish reflects its target generation — sleek, fast, and social-media conscious.
Direction and Production
The vignette-based structure works in parts. Each breakup moment feels curated and instantly recognizable. The relatability factor is high.
However, what connects these pieces feels thin. Pookie often plays like a well-assembled playlist rather than a narrative that builds cumulative emotional weight. You’re entertained in segments — but the overall arc lacks deeper resonance.
There’s also an over-reliance on trendiness. “Bro” culture, boomer jokes, Instagram references — they pile up like hashtags. Topical humor ages quickly, and the film occasionally feels aware of its own shelf life.
More concerning is the film’s handling of moral balance. Kailash’s violent road rage and hinted history of aggression are serious red flags. Yet his healing journey feels lighter — gym sessions and camaraderie. Aazhi’s spiral, in contrast, leads to humiliation. The film frames both as parallel suffering, which unintentionally skews sympathy and creates a questionable equivalence.
For a film so tuned into modern relationship dynamics, this blind spot stands out.
Plus ✅
- Highly relatable breakup vignettes
- Strong, polished music by Vijay Antony
- Engaging performances from both leads
- Brisk pacing and modern presentation
- Humorous touches that genuinely land
Minus ❌
- Lacks strong narrative accumulation
- Overuse of trendy references
- Emotional depth between segments feels thin
- Questionable moral balance in character arcs
Final Thoughts
Pookie knows its audience and plays confidently to them. It captures the chaos, ego, and performative nature of modern breakups with sharp observation. In pieces, it connects powerfully.
But whether those pieces form a lasting whole is debatable.
It’s a polished, relatable, social-media-age romance drama — entertaining in the moment, slightly hollow in retrospect.
⭐ Open Mic Suresh Rating
3.5 / 5 ⭐⭐⭐⭐☆

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