Heartin Movie Review: ★★★½☆ (3.5/5)
A simple love triangle, soulful music, and heartfelt performances make this gentle romantic drama an enjoyable watch. Director Kishore Kumar keeps things simple, letting the emotions and relationships take center stage throughout the film.
Rating: ★★★½☆ (3.5/5)
Director: Kishore Kumar
Release: June 26, 2026
Language: Tamil
Cast: Sananth, Madonna Sebastian, Emaya
Runtime: Under 2 hours
Not every film needs to shake the world. Some films just need to make you feel warm for a couple of hours and send you home with a smile. Heartin is exactly that kind of film — and it does that job with sincerity and charm.
The story is straightforward. A young man in a happy relationship finds his life complicated when his ex-girlfriend comes back into the picture. What follows is a familiar emotional triangle built around love, misunderstandings, and the question of what people truly want from the relationships they choose.
Director Kishore Kumar does not try to reinvent anything here.
He tells the story cleanly, keeps the tone light and grounded, and lets the emotions do the work. The first half is breezy and romantic — the kind of easy-going opening that puts you in a good mood without demanding much in return. The second half becomes a little more emotionally layered as the characters work through their conflicts, and while it does not always hit the dramatic highs it aims for, it never loses the warmth that makes the film work.
Sananth is convincing in the lead role.
He fits the character comfortably and shares natural chemistry with both Madonna Sebastian and debutante Emaya, which matters a great deal in a film built entirely around the relationships between these three people. When those relationships feel real, the film’s emotional stakes feel real too.
Madonna Sebastian, as always, is a pleasure to watch.
She brings an effortless grace and emotional intelligence to everything she does, and even in a relatively familiar role she finds small moments that feel genuinely her own. There is a reason she keeps making films like this work — she understands how to be honest on screen without making it look like effort.
Emaya makes a confident debut.
For a first film, she holds her own in scenes that require her to navigate complicated emotional territory, and she does so without tipping into either overdoing it or disappearing entirely. A promising start.
WhatsApp Mani provides the film’s comic relief and manages to be actually funny rather than just loud, which is a harder balance to strike than it sounds.
The real star of Heartin, though, is the technical package.
Rajesh Murugesan’s music is simply beautiful. The songs are melodious and the background score knows exactly when to support a scene and when to step back. His music elevates moments that the screenplay alone might not have fully landed.
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Mukes’ cinematography is gorgeous throughout.
The locations — Jaipur and Ooty — are captured with a warmth and vibrancy that suits the romantic tone perfectly. Some of the visual compositions are genuinely lovely, and the film earns its scenic beauty rather than just using it as backdrop.
Editor Barath Vikraman keeps things crisp and under two hours, which is exactly the right instinct for a film like this.
Heartin will not challenge you or surprise you in any meaningful way. But it will make you feel good, and in a crowded release landscape, that is worth something.
Rajesh Murugesan’s soothing music and the effortless chemistry between the leads make this romance quietly memorable. Madonna Sebastian, Sananth, and debutant Emaya bring warmth and sincerity to this emotional Tamil romance that celebrates love and second chances. It may not reinvent the romance genre, but its warmth, honesty, and relatable emotions make it an easy film to enjoy.
Heartin is now playing in cinemas.

