
Aishwarya Rajesh and Kathir in stills from ‘Suzhal’ season 2
| Photo Credit: Special Arrangement
The swanky event hall within a star hotel was buzzing with activity. Amidst Suzhal 2’s promotional interviews, the upcoming season’s trailer was released. The team, consisting of actors Aishwarya Rajesh and Kathir and directors Bramma and Sarjun KM, were busy punching text into their phones as they shared the trailer. The first season turned out to be a huge success, and the team, once done with giving the world a glimpse of what season 2 beholds, sits down to talk about Suzhal 2.
Excerpts from the conversation:
What does the success of ‘Suzhal’ season 1 mean to you?
Aishwarya Rajesh: I think the success of Suzhal, as a big-budget Tamil series, has revolutionised the industry. There’s always a difference between the North and South film industries and when a series of this magnitude happens, it gives hope to makers that we can get a global reach for our stories.
Bramma: To work on a project like the first season involving such a huge team and scale was a success for me. I could see the success shaping up right from the making stage. When the audience resonated with it the same way we did, it became an extended success.
Directors Sarjun KM and Bramma
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement
Sarjun, you are new to the world of Suzhal, but you have done your fair share of work in the OTT space. How was it to fit into this world?
In a film with a writer-director collaboration, the director takes the writer’s work and tweaks it according to their vision. The exact opposite happens here, as we have showrunners (directors Pushkar and Gayatri), who have written the story. To convert their vision to content, they brought in two directors. There were instances where I had to ask Bramma sir to shoot a scene a certain way as I had a continuation of it in the fifth episode that I had to shoot. The ecosystem is different in this format. Such work has been done in the West with series like Game of Thrones featuring multiple directors. We are getting used to this now and this collaborative style is very healthy.
Kathir, in the first season, you played a rookie cop. How has the character Sakkarai evolved in the new season?
Kathir in a still from ‘Suzhal’ season 2
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement
Speaking of the trailer, it’s surprising that the crime is revealed in it while the crime happened to be the secret in season one…
Bramma: The trailer teases the whodunnit aspect of the series but there’s also more to it. To write such a complicated plot — with many characters and their own journeys — and unravelling it slowly to the audience is tough. We hope we have set it up well.
The first season’s happenings were in a small hill station while season two seems to be happening in a coastal area. Why is the location such an important element in a thriller?
Bramma: The variety of landscapes is a lot in Tamil Nadu. Ours is one of the rare states to have it all — Kurinji (mountains), Mullai (forests), Marutham (cropland), Neithal (seashore) and Paalai (dry lands). Since we have touched upon two of them, there’s space to do more. Moreover, apart from being unique landscapes, they have their own culture, people and their problems. Setting it up in such a place gives the space to explore something new.
Aishwarya Rajesh in a still from ‘Suzhal’ season 2
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement
As actors, how does it feel to get back to playing a more evolved version of characters you had already played?
Kathir: I ask a lot of questions to my directors as I am curious to know whether I’m on the same page as to what they expect from me. There are connections to season one and a particular scene from it could be an aspect that has made Sakkarai more mature in this season.
Both filmmakers have made socially-conscious films and Suzhal season one also touches upon several important and sensitive topics. Can we expect more on that front in season two?
Kathir and Lal in a still from ‘Suzhal’ season 2
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement
Be it Suzhal season one or films like Kantara which came out the same year, such contents have reiterated time and again how going local makes it pan-Indian. How do you see this trend?
This is also a kind of media tourism. One of the aspects I am awaiting the audience to watch in season two is the open sea, which most of us who live in the coastal region take for granted. There are so many in India who have not had the opportunity to see how expansive an ocean can be. I hope the audience enjoys the views we have captured.
Sarjun KM: If I know there’s a show set in a small New Zealand village, I would love to see it. It would show me how that place would look, its inhabitants and their livelihood and lifestyle. Commercial shows are always there and we enjoy them too but some shows stay with us longer. The British crime drama Broadchurch is a show I love. It’s also about a big crime in a small town in England and the way they show the country is different from the wallpaper-worthy shots we have seen in other shows from the UK. The feel such a series gives is very unique and it will also reach a global audience. Suzhal season 1 became a hit for that reason; it was about a small town, its people and lifestyle and how flawed humans are. The connection and relatability it brings is universal and when tapped into it, it goes global.
Published – February 25, 2025 04:41 pm IST