Detective Ujjawalan, the latest addition to Netflix’s Malayalam superhero universe, was supposed to ride the high wave created by Minnal Murali. The 2021 film, starring Tovino Thomas, had created a buzz not just in Kerala but across India and even internationally, with its fresh take on a homegrown superhero. Naturally, when Detective Ujjawalan was announced as a part of the same cinematic universe, expectations were high.
But the final product has landed with barely a whisper. Despite being placed at #7 in Netflix India’s list of most-watched non-English films during its debut week, the response has been lukewarm. The film didn’t generate any noticeable buzz on social media, there were no trending hashtags, and it didn’t spark the kind of conversations or fan theories that Minnal Murali had enjoyed.
A part of the problem is Netflix’s own marketing. The platform gave the film almost no promotional push. There were no significant campaigns, barely any interviews or features, and hardly any build-up to the release. In a crowded streaming space, where viewers need reasons to care, Detective Ujjawalan didn’t get one.
But more than that, the film itself lacks impact. The story is underwhelming, the characters forgettable, and it fails to capture the magic or emotional pull of its predecessor. This is a universe that had potential, but the second outing seems to squander it.
Unless word of mouth does some heavy lifting, which looks unlikely, Detective Ujjawalan may quietly vanish from memory, marking a major missed opportunity for Netflix and Malayalam cinema.