Tu Yaa Main Review: A Jaw-Dropping Survival Thriller Wrapped in a Rom-Com Heart

Movie –Tu Yaa Main Movie  

Star Cast: Adarsh Gourav, Shanaya Kapoor, Parul Gulati

Director: Bejoy Nambiar

Language: Hindi

Available On: Theatrical release

Runtime: 150 Minutes

Review Rating: 3.5

Tu Yaa Main, starring Adarsh Gourav and Shanaya Kapoor, is a cinematic curveball. Smartly adapted by Himanshu Sharma from the Thai survival hit The Pool, the film starts as a classic “rich girl-poor boy” romance before plummeting literally into a high-stakes battle for survival. Directed by Bejoy Nambiar, it’s a gritty, edge-of-the-seat experience that proves Indian cinema can handle the survival genre with flair.

The story introduces us to Maruti (Adarsh Gourav), an ambitious rapper from a modest neighborhood who falls for Avani (Shanaya Kapoor), a high-society social media influencer known as “Ms. Vanity.” Their blossoming romance is breezy and charming, filled with sharp dialogue and authentic chemistry. However, the vibe shifts dramatically when the couple finds themselves trapped in a ramshackle, empty indoor swimming pool during a torrential downpour—with a predatory reptile for company.

This is arguably Bejoy Nambiar’s most focused work to date. While he occasionally skims over logical leaps, his mastery over the “scare quotient” and the film’s pacing is undeniable. However, the true MVPs are Phantom VFX and Vriksh Studio LLP. The creature effects and the claustrophobic setting are handled so well that the danger feels tactile and terrifying.

The technical brilliance is further elevated by Remy Dalai’s cinematography and an outstanding background score by Prateek Rajagopal. The imaginative use of vintage Bollywood tracks like “Tum Hi Hamari Ho Manzil” adds a haunting, ironic layer to the modern-day struggle.

Tu Yaa Main is a rare breed in Bollywood, a genre-bending thriller that respects the audience’s intelligence while delivering heart-pounding entertainment. It clocks in at 150 minutes but rarely feels bloated, thanks to its emotional weight and visceral tension. If you’re looking for something that moves beyond the typical romantic template, this is your weekend watch.

Ziya Khan

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