Takip et

Watch the official trailer to see how a television show begins to control a family's reality:

The film stars Siddique, Bhanu, and Monica Dogra in leading roles. The story revolves around the life of a man named Yavar, who leads a happy life with his wife, Sharmila. However, their life takes a dark turn when Sharmila gets involved with a mysterious and mentally unstable individual.

The film highlights this tension by showing how individual paranoia (each family member obsessed with their own screen) destroys the collective well-being of the household. The antidote to the film's horror is not a high-tech solution but a return to community—neighbors checking on neighbors, families eating without screens, and the spoken blessing of Yavarum Nalam uttered with genuine intent. This narrative choice suggests that the greatest threat to our well-being is not external technology but our internal fragmentation.

15 Years later and this still creeps me out. 📺😱

Using a TV show as a harbinger of doom was ahead of its time in 2009.

Yavarum Nalam (meaning "Everyone is Well") is a landmark 2009 Indian psychological horror-thriller that remains a cult favorite for its unique "meta" premise. Simultaneously filmed in Hindi as , it broke away from typical supernatural tropes by using modern technology—specifically a television—as the medium for a haunting. Movie Overview & Plot