‘Kaakkee Circus’ series review: Sans big names, this series is a ‘slow burn’ comedy


A still from ‘Kaakkee Circus’

A still from ‘Kaakkee Circus’
| Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

The Tamil web series Kaakkee Circus is a caper story that pivots on a theft of a hundi (donation box) in a small town in Tamil Nadu, cops out to ‘crack the case’ and a thief who takes pride in his calling. This series makes up for the lack of big names with a clever storyline, humour and a motley crew of quirky characters.

Written by Ameen Barif and Akash Chandramohan and directed by Ameen, the seven-episode series reminds one of that 2025 Malayalam black comedy thriller Maranamass. Only that the main character is a thief and not a serial killer, as in that film. It could also be because Rajesh Madhavan is the ‘villain’ in both.

The action is set in a fictional town in Tamil Nadu, with its rather memorable set of characters — a pair of wannabe content creators, cops at the local police station/sub-jail and the prisoners, a jailer who fancies himself to be a writer, a coffin maker, and of course, a rather egotistical petty thief, and his girlfriend, among others.

A still from ‘Kaakee Circus’

A still from ‘Kaakee Circus’
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

The series takes its time building its momentum, but it draws you at a rather languid pace. It is something of a ‘slow-burn’ comedy, the kind that makes you smile even after you have finished watching it. 

Munishkanth excels as the book-obsessed jail warden, Anbuselvan, who believes books are the best means to reform petty criminals. His idea of ‘punishment’ is to make them read and test on what they have imbibed. Then there is a younger, brasher cop, Arjun (essayed by Subash Selvam), who is itching to solve crime the old-fashioned way with some force, which may or may not involve waving around the lathi a bit, which his superior resists. This benign, almost indulgent aspect of the police seems like a fantasy.

Kaakkee Circus (Tamil/Malayalam)

Director: Ameen Barif

Cast: Munishkanth, Rajesh Madhavan, Gauthami Nair, Subhash Selvam, Abdul Lee

Runtime: 20-25 minutes

Episodes: 7

Synopsis: A thief breaks into a jail to steal the donation box installed at a shrine within the premises and the series of events that it unleashes

The theft of the donation box from the sub-jail premises sparks action and panic at the police station. The cops replace the cash in the hundi; the cover-up would imply that the theft never happened. The Malayali bus conductor, Manoj — essayed with the right mix of mystery, mischief and menace by Rajesh Madhavan — is in on the hottest gossip in town. He is the thief who takes pride in his ‘job’.

So, when he hears that the heist he successfully pulled off “did not happen,” his ego takes a hit, and he sets out to set the record straight. Especially because he is very good at his job: he literally walks off with a gas cylinder from a house, from right under the noses of the inmates of the house, a mother and son duo. The mother is a content creator who shoots reels with her younger female friend, on the lookout for that viral reel that will take their views out of the single- and double-digit wilderness into the four-figure and beyond. This pair acts as a sort of chorus, watching the action unfold and even contributing to the resolution.

A still from ‘Kaakee Circus’

A still from ‘Kaakee Circus’
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

It is a chaotically quirky and comic universe, where irony has the run of the place. For instance, the town’s coffin shop is called Heaven. The promise for the afterlife? In a bizarre, tragi-comic turn of events, a coffin in the shop kills a person. The main ‘eye’ witness claims that he can identify the thief by the man’s shadow. There are other such amusing nuggets in the series. The action is episodic, with several subplots weaving in perfectly with the main plot.

Kaakkee Circus is a small web series but big on execution. What works in humour is on point, the jokes landing as intended. Because each episode is under 20-25 minutes, it does not give too much space for boredom to creep in, even though the plot occasionally seems to meander.

Kaakkee Circus is streaming on ZEE5



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