Story:
Krishna and Roops, a couple quietly calling it quits, head to an isolated cottage for one last gentle goodbye. They are just two people returning gifts, trading tender lines, and singing a breakup poem under the stars. Then the cottage decides to join the party. A bottled-up spirit is out, and what begins as a polite haunting changes the course of their lives. What does the ghost have in store for the duo?
Performances & Technical Departments:
Thaksh, in his first role, plays Krishna with such easy warmth that you forget he is a debutant. He is the guy who answers work calls during a breakup getaway yet still finds time to make Roops laugh. It is good that he doesn't come with brooding heroics. There are no toxic edges that make him undesirable. He is just a decent, fun-loving man who can talk stars and still remember to water the plants.
Matylda Bajer’s Roops is pure sunshine. Raised by a single mother, she finds comfort in soil and sky, and Bajer lets you feel every conversation she holds with her soon-to-be-estranged lover.
Ajithvasan Uggina’s direction is confident. He shoots across the UK and India but makes the cottage feel like its own little universe. The real star of the technical side, though, is Maestro Ilaiyaraaja. His symphonic score, recorded with the Bow Tie Orchestra, is impressive. It is almost the third character of the tale.
Analysis:
The chemistry between the lead pair crackles in the small things: the way they bicker like an old married Tom-and-Jerry pair after the spirit arrives, the shared-birthday moment that lands like a soft punch to the heart. The film cleverly subverts everything you expect from a haunted-house story. The nocturnal scares are never cheap jump-scares.
With only two visible actors on screen the entire time, the tender and everyday moments they share become strangely romantic. They are eerie, yes, but the kind of eerie that makes you smile instead of scream. The film’s loveliest surprise is something that is not vengeful.
The cross-cultural romance never feels forced. When Roops slips into a saree, it isn’t a nod to tradition for tradition’s sake. Their shared birthday becomes a beautiful shorthand for souls that were always meant to overlap. Even the star-gazing scene (where they see lost loved ones in the constellations) lands with poetic grace.
The film keeps hinting at a bigger twist, then delivers something sweeter and more human than any horror payoff could manage.
Verdict:
A Beautiful Breakup is the Valentine’s week gift we didn’t know we needed: funny, tender, a little spooky, and deeply hopeful. It reminds us that sometimes the universe throws a spirit into your breakup just to remind you that love doesn’t end.
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