
Tamil actor Arjun Das to foray into Malayalam with Ahammed Khabeer’s next
The Hindu
Tamil actor Arjun Das is all to make his Malayalam debut with Madhuram-director Ahammed Khabeer’s upcoming film
Tamil actor Arjun Das, well known for starring in Lokesh Kanagaraj’s LCU films, Andhaghaaram and Aneethi, is all to make his Malayalam debut with Madhuram-director Ahammed Khabeer’s upcoming film. A romantic comedy, the yet-untitled film will have music scored by Hesham Abdul Wahab (Hridayam, Kushi, Hi Nanna).
Arjun shared a picture with Ahammed on Wednesday to announce the news.
Meanwhile, Arjun is currently awaiting the release of Bejoy Nambiar’s Tamil-Hindi bilingual film Por, co-starring Kalidas Jayaram. The film’s Hindi version, titled Dange, stars Harshvardhan Rane and Ehan Bhatt in the lead.
Starring TJ Bhanu, Nikita Dutta and Sanchana Natarajan as the female leads, the film is set to release in theatres on March 1.
Ahammed, on the other hand, is known for helming June (2019), starring Rajisha Vijayan, Madhuram (2021), starring Joju George and Shruti Ramachandran, and the crime web series Kerala Crime Files, the second season of which is currently in production.

In a few days, there would be a burst of greetings. They would resonate with different wavelengths of emotion and effort. Simple and insincere. Simple but sincere. Complex yet insincere. Complex and sincere. That last category would encompass physical greeting cards that come at some price to the sender, the cost more hidden than revealed. These are customised and handcrafted cards; if the reader fancies sending them when 2026 dawns, they might want to pick the brains of these two residents of Chennai, one a corporate professional and the other yet to outgrow the school uniform

‘Pharma’ series review: Despite strong performances and solid premise, the narrative misses the mark
Pharma offers strong performances but falters in storytelling, making it a passable watch despite its intriguing premise.

The Kochi Biennale is evolving, better, I love it. There have been problems in the past but they it seems to have been ironed out. For me, the atmosphere, the fact of getting younger artists doing work, showing them, getting the involvement of the local people… it is the biggest asset, the People’s Biennale part of it. This Biennale has a great atmosphere and It is a feeling of having succeeded, everybody is feeling a sense of achievement… so that’s it is quite good!










