Hit: The First Case Tamil =link= -
Here is the central critique: Hit: The First Case is an almost shot-for-shot, scene-for-scene remake of the Telugu original. For those who have seen the 2020 film, there are zero surprises. The dialogue translations are literal, the camera angles are identical, and even the twist is delivered with the exact same rhythm. While director Sailesh Kolanu ensures technical proficiency (the editing is crisp, the sound design is immersive), his direction lacks the courage to reinterpret.
In the crowded landscape of pan-Indian remakes, Hit: The First Case (Tamil) arrives with a significant advantage: a solid, gritty source material. Directed by Dr. Sailesh Kolanu (who also helmed the original Telugu version), the Tamil remake starring Sethupathi and Tanya Ravichandran attempts to transplant the same atmosphere of procedural dread from Hyderabad to Kanyakumari. The result is a technically competent, scene-by-scene recreation that ultimately raises a troubling question: if nothing new is added, what is the point?
Hit: The First Case (Tamil) is a paradox. It is a well-acted, well-crafted thriller that is technically superior to many Tamil commercial films. Yet, it is also an entirely redundant piece of cinema. It brings nothing new to the table—no cultural reinterpretation, no character expansion, no stylistic innovation. hit: the first case tamil
That said, for a first-time viewer (who has not seen the Telugu version), the final reveal is genuinely unsettling. The film takes a bold, dark turn into themes of pathological obsession and the banality of evil. The identity of the perpetrator and the motive, while disturbing, is handled without sensationalism. Sethupathi’s quiet fury during the interrogation in the final act is where the film truly earns its stripes.
Moreover, the film’s deliberate pacing, which worked as a strength in the original, becomes a liability here due to familiarity. The first half, which meticulously builds the missing person’s case, feels sluggish because the audience already knows the beats. The film fails to generate fresh suspense, relying entirely on the audience not having seen the predecessor. Here is the central critique: Hit: The First
At the center of it all is Sethupathi. The actor, known for his effortless naturalism, is perfectly cast as the damaged, world-weary cop. He doesn’t play Vikram as a super-cop; he plays him as a wounded animal—flinching during panic attacks, speaking in low, exhausted tones, and using his intelligence rather than his fists. The scene where he breaks down during a therapy session is a masterclass in restrained vulnerability. Tanya Ravichandran, as his supportive colleague and love interest, delivers a steady, if underwritten, performance. Supporting actors like Krishna Kumar and Ilavarasu provide reliable grounding.
For those who have never seen the Telugu original, this is a solid 3.5-star thriller worth your time. For everyone else, it is a fascinating case study in the limitations of the remake culture: perfect fidelity does not equal artistic value. A great remake should reimagine , not reproduce. Hit lands its technical punches, but fails to leave a distinct mark of its own. Sailesh Kolanu (who also helmed the original Telugu
Recommended for fans of procedural thrillers and Sethupathi’s performance; skip if you’ve already solved the case in Telugu.