Bejoy Nambiar’s Tu Yaa Main is what happens when Instagram glamour collides headfirst with reptilian reality and frankly, it’s a ride. Produced by Aanand L Rai and Himanshu Sharma, and adapted from the Thai thriller The Pool (2018), the film swaps ring lights for survival instincts and asks a deliciously dark question: when push comes to shove (or snap), is it you or me?
At the centre are Avani Shah (Shanaya Kapoor), the immaculately curated influencer known as Miss Vanity, and Maruti Kadam (Adarsh Gourav), a hustling rapper from Nalasopara who answers to Aala Flowpara. AF – get it? She has brand managers and millions of followers; he has grit, ambition and raw talent. Their meet-cute at a music event begins as a strategic collaboration because romance in 2026 must first pass the engagement-metrics test but frequent meetings soften rivalry into attraction. Call it Saiyaara redux crossed with Sairaat lite or something.
The first half is slick, stylish and surprisingly tender. Nambiar takes his time establishing the class divide, letting Mumbai’s damp streets, cramped gullies and overcrowded chawls breathe authenticity into Maruti’s world, while Avani’s universe gleams with polish and privilege. The romance unfolds without melodrama, and the music, especially Fame us and Aankhein chaar adds mood without screaming for attention. Writer Abhishek Bandekar’s pithy and witty dialogue add to the film’s favour.
Then comes Goa. And the empty 20 feet deep swimming pool. And then because subtlety is overrated, comes the crocodile. The second half ditches influencer drama and dives straight into survival thriller territory. Stripped of filters, followers and flawless lighting, Avani and Maruti are forced to confront hunger, fear and a very toothy and perpetually hungry co-star. The tension is palpable; several sequences genuinely keep you gripping your armrest. Remy Dalai’s cinematography shines in the claustrophobic pool setting, turning concrete into a pressure cooker. The animatronics team deserves applause, in some scenes, the crocodile looks alarmingly real.
But the CGI is inconsistent. In certain moments, the reptile is terrifyingly convincing. In others, it looks like it wandered in from a less expensive streaming show. A few survival manoeuvres stretch plausibility to near-yoga levels, briefly snapping the tension.
What keeps the film afloat (pun unapologetically intended) are the performances. Adarsh Gourav is terrific, restless, hungry, layered. He brings a lived-in authenticity to Maruti, especially in moments where bravado gives way to vulnerability. His Mumbai cadence and physicality anchor the film. Shanaya Kapoor plays Avani with surprising restraint. She resists caricature, allowing privilege to register through poise rather than parody. When fear strips away her composure, the shift is effective. Their chemistry is strong enough to hold the narrative together even when the screenplay threatens to split into two separate films.
That split is the film’s biggest weakness. The early emotional conflicts, family pressures, career dilemmas, class anxieties, are largely abandoned once the crocodile clocks in. It feels like two parallel stories awkwardly sharing screen time: one about love across social divides, the other about not becoming lunch.
Still, in a Hindi film landscape that rarely experiments with survival thrillers, Tu Yaa Main deserves points for audacity. It is stylish, tense and powered by two committed leads who refuse to phone it in, even when trapped in a drained pool with a predator.
Imperfect? Absolutely. Entertaining? Very much so. And if nothing else, it may just make influencers think twice before chasing “extreme content”. Is there a sequel in place? Well, they both survive and so does the croc, so your guess is as good as mine.
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