Carmeni Selvam attempts to deliver a moral lesson on financial responsibility. The film features Samuthirakani in the lead role while Gautham Menon and Abhinaya played other key roles. Directed by Ram Chakri and released on April 3, 2026,
The story revolves around Selvam (Samuthirakani), a driver who becomes entangled in a web of debt and financial struggles. Working for businessman Sampath (Gautham Menon), Selvam’s life takes a downward spiral when he starts renting out his boss’s car illegally to make a quick buck. As his lies catch up to him, he is forced to make desperate choices, including abandoning his family to seek work abroad.
Samuthirakani is a capable actor, and he delivered in this film too. But, in this film he is stuck in his typical "preachy middle-class man" persona that we have seen countless times before. There is nothing new in his performance here. Lakshmi Priya as Shanti is relegated to the cliché role of the long-suffering wife, and Gautham Menon is okay in his richman role. The chemistry is non-existent, making the family’s plight hard to care about.
The film is a missed opportunity. While the first half tries to depict middle-class struggles, it relies on forced drama and illogical character decisions like renting out a boss's car and expecting no consequences that makes the protagonist hard to sympathize with. The second half devolves into a melodramatic PSA about debt that feels about twenty years too late for modern cinema.
Technically, the film is lackluster. The background score is intrusive rather than "soul-stirring," and the cinematography is flat, failing to capture any real essence of Chennai. Carmeni Selvam is an exhausting watch that mistakes misery for depth and lecturing for storytelling. It’s a film that warns you to live within your means, but you’d be better off saving your "means" and skipping this ticket entirely.
Altogether, The film struggles to find its footing from the start. The movie moves at a snail's pace, making its two-hour runtime feel like four. Unfortunately, the "crux" of the story is a series of predictable misfortunes that feel more like a lecture than a narrative. The film fails to offer anything beyond recycled tropes. Considering all these, CineJosh goes with 1 rating.