‘Pennu Case’ spoiler alert: Why Febin Sidharth’s debut plays it safe till the final twist

# Entertainment Desk
Film poster.
Film poster.

Director Febin Sidharth’s 'Pennu Case' — starring Nikhila Vimal — arrives as one of Malayalam cinema’s most talked-about releases of early 2026, not because it reinvents the crime genre, but due to the way it reframes a familiar marriage-fraud narrative with a deliberate twist that divides audiences.

The film opens with a wedding in Kannur thrown into chaos when a group of angry grooms interrupts the ceremony, accusing the bride — later identified as Rohini — of marrying and defrauding men across Kerala and Karnataka. The police, led by CI Manoj (Hakim Shahjahan), take Rohini into custody and begin an investigation that quickly becomes the emotional core of the story.

What initially seems like a straightforward crime tale soon peels back layers of Rohini’s past. Under interrogation, she reveals that her first scam began in Mysore, where financial desperation and her ailing mother’s treatment pushed her into a fraudulent marriage.

Her involvement, however, isn’t just opportunistic: she was manipulated and coerced into further scams by a local criminal network led by a man named David (Shivajith).

This twist reframes Rohini from a cold-hearted con woman into a pawn caught in a larger, murkier criminal web — a narrative choice that critic Anandu Suresh notes is familiar from classic thrillers but used here to root the story in regional realities.

The climax further complicates the viewer’s perspective. Although the film features a predictable payoff, many aspects of the “how” behind Rohini’s cons are only hinted at, not shown, leaving audiences to piece together the manipulations and power plays that underpin her marriage scams.

Also read: ‘Mammooka can do that, it’s a privilege but if we ask...’: Nikhila Vimal on actors asking for roles

Some may term this narrative choice as “deliberately generic” until the twist lands, borrowing its structure from well-known thriller formulas rather than offering a wholly original revelation.

Critics might also point out that while the premise has potential for deeper character study and innovative plotting, the film often stops short. Key sequences involving Rohini’s modus operandi are glossed over, and humour intended to balance the serious themes lands unevenly.

Despite these flaws, ‘Pennu Case’ gains its most compelling moments from Rohini’s vulnerability in custody and her gradual emotional exposure, which humanizes a character that could otherwise be dismissed as merely deceptive.

In sum, the film uses a familiar twist to elevate its basic narrative, but the choice to withhold much of the con mechanics and rely on suspense rather than surprise leaves the overall impact mixed. Audiences seeking a fresh take on the con-artist genre may find the climax intriguing, even if the execution feels cautious.