Balan: The Boy Review: Chidambaram Finds Beauty In Uncertainty

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The most surprising thing about Balan: The Boy isn’t that it comes after Manjummel Boys. It’s that director Chidambaram appears almost uninterested in repeating any of the qualities that made that film a phenomenon. Where Manjummel Boys thrived on urgency, collective emotion, and a clear objective, Balan: The Boy turns inward. Written by Jithu Madhavan, the film follows a young boy searching for his missing mother, but beneath the mystery lies a more elusive story about memory, identity, and the scars we inherit from those we love.

Chidambaram approaches Balan’s story with the patience of someone less interested in solving a mystery than understanding the emotional wreckage it leaves behind. Information arrives in fragments, often out of sequence, forcing viewers to assemble meaning from memories that may not be entirely reliable. The effect is disorienting at first, but increasingly immersive as the film progresses. It’s an ambitious shift for a filmmaker coming off one of Malayalam cinema’s biggest successes, and while not every gamble pays off, the conviction behind the attempt is difficult to ignore.

At the centre is Balan, a boy navigating a world shaped by absence. His relationship with his mother forms the narrative spine of the film, but the journey gradually becomes an excavation of buried trauma and half-forgotten truths. The further he moves forward, the deeper he is forced to look back.

The film’s most interesting decision is that it refuses to treat information as objective. Every revelation arrives filtered through memory, trauma, or perception, making the mystery less about discovering what happened than understanding how people remember what happened. In that sense, Balan: The Boy isn’t structured like a conventional thriller at all. It functions more like an excavation, where emotional truth matters more than factual certainty. Even major revelations rarely arrive with the sense of finality associated with thrillers. Instead, they often raise new questions about perspective and recollection. The film repeatedly suggests that remembering and understanding are not the same thing.

Chidambaram and Jithu Madhavan repeatedly place audiences inside the protagonist’s uncertainty, withholding information, and allowing revelations to emerge organically rather than through exposition-heavy shortcuts. Balan: The Boy is less interested in uncovering the truth than examining the damage caused by not knowing it. Chidambaram understands that absence can sometimes be more psychologically overwhelming than loss itself.

For much of its running time, this approach works beautifully. The film creates an atmosphere of quiet unease where every conversation feels loaded with history and every recollection carries the possibility of revelation. Chidambaram trusts viewers to connect the dots, and there’s something refreshing about a filmmaker resisting the temptation to explain every emotional beat.

Yet the same quality that distinguishes the film also limits it. The film becomes less emotionally involving whenever it grows more interested in protecting its secrets. Some of its strongest moments emerge not from revelation but from recognition, when viewers are allowed to understand what characters are feeling rather than simply wonder what happened to them. There are stretches where ambiguity begins to feel less like a storytelling choice and more like an end in itself. One recurring issue is that the screenplay occasionally withholds information from viewers long after it has ceased to be dramatically useful. The result isn’t confusion so much as distance. We understand that something important has happened, but not always why we should feel its impact in that particular moment. The film remains intriguing throughout, but its emotional rhythms aren’t always as effective as its narrative ones.

The screenplay is at its strongest when dealing with people rather than puzzles. One of Jithu Madhavan’s most impressive achievements is how efficiently he establishes character motivations. The film spends remarkably little time explaining who these people are, yet when they make difficult decisions later, those choices feel entirely consistent with the emotional foundations laid earlier. Even supporting characters are afforded enough detail to feel like individuals rather than functions of the plot.

For all its tonal differences from Romancham and Aavesham, Balan: The Boy feels surprisingly consistent with Jithu Madhavan’s writing preoccupations. His characters are often trapped inside incomplete versions of reality, constructing narratives that help them make sense of a world they don’t fully understand. In Romancham and Aavesham, or even Painkili, that uncertainty became a source of comedy, with characters repeatedly mistaking perception for truth. Here, the writer strips away the humour and exposes the emotional cost of living with unanswered questions. The misunderstandings remain, but the consequences are no longer amusing. They shape identities, relationships, and entire lives.

That strength extends to the performances. Young Adhisheshan KR delivers the kind of performance that anchors an entire film. Present in almost every major scene, he carries the narrative with remarkable confidence and emotional intelligence. It would have been easy to turn Balan into a symbol of suffering, but Adhisheshan finds something more nuanced. He captures the confusion, resilience, and stubborn hopefulness of a child forced to process experiences beyond his years. The performance never reaches for sympathy and is all the more moving because of it. This has been effectively carried forward later in the film by Zinaan as the older Balan.

Farzana Palathingal is equally impressive as Balan’s mother. The role requires her to embody both strength and vulnerability, often within the same scene, and she handles those contradictions with striking ease. What makes the performance memorable is its refusal to idealise motherhood. This is not a saintly figure defined solely by sacrifice. Farzana creates a character who feels human first, making the emotional bond at the centre of the film resonate with greater force.

Jean Paul Lal brings a quiet authority to his character, finding subtle shades within limited screen time. His dialogue delivery and understated screen presence leave a lasting impression without ever feeling performative. Girish A D also contributes effectively, adding warmth and texture to the film’s emotional landscape. Across the board, the casting feels exceptionally considered. Every face appears chosen for what it brings to the world of the film rather than for familiarity or recognisability. Another performance to note as such would be Dolly June as the elderly lady that the mother and child encounter during their journey across multiple identities. 

Tovino Thomas deserves special mention for a performance that could easily have become a distraction. Instead, he disappears into this Dickensian character with admirable restraint. In an era where even extended cameos are often designed to preserve star aura, Tovino’s contribution feels refreshingly unselfconscious. The performance works because it is rooted entirely in character, to the point where one occasionally forgets the significance of the casting itself, which may be the highest compliment one can pay the actor.

If the screenplay occasionally struggles to balance mystery with momentum, the technical departments rarely miss a step. Shyju Khalid’s cinematography is among the film’s greatest assets. His camera frequently observes from a distance, allowing characters to appear isolated within their surroundings. Wayanad itself becomes an extension of the film’s psychology. Rather than reducing the landscape to postcard imagery, the film uses its dense forests, winding paths, and secluded homes to create a sense of emotional dislocation. The geography feels lived-in and meaningful rather than decorative.

Ajayan Chalissery’s production design contributes significantly to this immersion. The spaces feel inhabited, carrying traces of the lives that have unfolded within them. Every location appears carefully considered without calling attention to itself. Together with the cinematography, sound design and editing, the production design creates a world that feels tangible even when the narrative itself becomes elusive. Vivek Harshan’s editing and the film’s sound design deserve equal credit for maintaining immersion. Even when the narrative occasionally threatens to drift, the technical craft ensures that viewers remain emotionally invested in the world Chidambaram has created.

Then there is Sushin Shyam. Few composers working today understand the relationship between music and atmosphere as intuitively as he does. The score doesn’t announce itself through grand gestures. Instead, it quietly amplifies the emotions already present within a scene. Some of the film’s most powerful moments derive their impact from the way image and sound work together. By the time the story reaches its emotional peaks, Sushin’s music has become inseparable from the film’s emotional texture.

At the same time, one occasionally wishes the film trusted its emotional core more than its structural complexity. Some revelations land with less force than expected because the film seems more invested in preserving mystery than fully unpacking its implications. There are moments when clarity might have served the material better than ambiguity.

Still, even when it falters, Balan: The Boy remains deeply engaging because it never feels calculated. If Manjummel Boys demonstrated Chidambaram’s ability to orchestrate collective emotion, Balan: The Boy showcases his interest in emotional isolation. The films may appear radically different on the surface, but both are ultimately about people navigating situations they struggle to fully comprehend.

Balan: The Boy may not completely connect with audiences seeking a conventional thriller or an emotionally straightforward drama. It is slower, more demanding, and occasionally frustrating. Its imperfections stem from ambition rather than compromise. Chidambaram’s previous film was about someone trying desperately to escape a cave. Balan: The Boy is about someone trying just as desperately to escape the shadows cast by memory. The journey is less immediately exhilarating, occasionally more uneven, but no less ambitious. The film occasionally mistakes obscurity for complexity, but its willingness to embrace uncertainty ultimately feels more rewarding than frustrating. Even when Balan: The Boy loses its footing, it never loses its curiosity… and that makes some impactful cinematic storytelling.

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