In this The Kerala Story 2: Goes Beyond review, we explore a film that arrives in 2026 not as a safe, predictable sequel but as a cinematic statement. When was the last time a Hindi film made you sit up straight, forget your popcorn, and feel the full weight of what’s unfolding on screen? This is that film.
Directed by Kamakhya Narayan Singh and produced once again by Vipul Amrutlal Shah under Sunshine Pictures, The Kerala Story 2: Goes Beyond is exactly what its title promises — it goes beyond. Beyond Kerala, beyond the first film’s scope, and beyond what most mainstream Hindi cinema is willing to say out loud. With three devastating central performances, a tightly woven multi-city narrative, and the kind of raw directorial confidence that announces a serious filmmaker, this sequel doesn’t just justify its existence — it surpasses its predecessor.
The Kerala Story 2: Goes Beyond is bold, emotionally devastating, and impossible to ignore. Three women, three cities, one shattering reality — told with raw conviction, strong performances, and mature direction. A minor stumble at the climax aside, this is one of 2026’s most essential theatrical experiences.
Language: Hindi
Age Rating: UA
Genre: Social Drama / Thriller
Director: Kamakhya Narayan Singh
Producer: Vipul Amrutlal Shah (Sunshine Pictures)
Runtime: 131 Minutes
The Plot — Three Stories, One Unbreakable Truth
At its heart, The Kerala Story 2 is a survival story — but calling it just that would be selling it short. The film follows three women simultaneously: Surekha (Ulka Gupta), a progressive UPSC aspirant in Kochi; Divya (Aditi Bhatia), a social media-obsessed teenager in Jodhpur; and Neha (Aishwarya Ojha), a promising javelin thrower in Gwalior. Each woman enters a relationship with someone who presents a carefully constructed facade — and each discovers, at devastating cost, how far that facade extends.
What makes the screenplay by Shah and Amarnath Jha genuinely impressive is its refusal to treat these women as passive victims. Every story has a turning point where the central character stops absorbing punishment and starts fighting back. The courtroom moments, the community confrontations, the quiet scenes where a parent finally understands what happened to their child — these land with real emotional weight because the buildup earns them.
The decision to expand the geography beyond Kerala is also a smart structural choice. It signals clearly that these are not isolated incidents or regional stories — they are happening everywhere, and the film wants you to sit with that discomfort.

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Performances — A Cast That Leaves Nothing on the Table
Ulka Gupta carries the film’s most layered arc as Surekha — an educated, liberal woman whose very progressiveness is used against her. Gupta’s performance is a careful, controlled burn. She doesn’t play Surekha as naive; she plays her as trusting, which makes her eventual devastation all the more painful to witness. This is a career-defining turn.
Aishwarya Ojha as Neha is the film’s quiet powerhouse. Her portrayal of a woman subjected to sustained, escalating trauma is extraordinarily naturalistic — never melodramatic, always real. The frustration, the helplessness, and eventually the resolve she conveys without overstatement make her the ensemble’s most affecting presence.
Aditi Bhatia as teenager Divya brings an initially breezy, social-media-native energy that makes her vulnerability feel completely believable. Her dance sequences add unexpected grace notes to an otherwise intense film, and her emotional journey from impulsive teenager to someone forced to grow up violently fast is handled with sensitivity.
On the antagonist side, Sumit Gahlawat as Salim is a masterclass in restrained menace — charming enough that you understand how Surekha trusted him, frightening enough that every scene with him crackles. Yuktam Khosla as Rashid delivers a chilling performance built on small, unsettling details. Arjan Aujla as Faizan brings cold, methodical cruelty to the film’s darkest storyline.
The extended supporting cast — Alka Amin, Ramji Bali, Purva Parag, Rajiv Kumar, Shweta Munshi, Lakshmi, Bhakti Vasani — brings remarkable authenticity to the parental and community roles that surround the three central stories. These are not throwaway parts; every performance adds texture and emotional credibility to the world the film builds.
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Direction — Kamakhya Narayan Singh Steps Up and Delivers
Stepping into a sequel of this cultural and commercial weight is not a small undertaking, and Kamakhya Narayan Singh handles it with the assurance of a filmmaker who knows precisely what story he wants to tell and how. His approach is deliberately raw rather than polished — and that rawness is the film’s greatest directorial asset.
Where another director might have softened the harder edges, Singh leans in. The scenes of domestic and psychological abuse are directed without manipulation or melodrama, which paradoxically makes them hit harder. He also demonstrates a strong command of parallel storytelling — keeping three distinct narratives alive simultaneously without sacrificing momentum or emotional clarity in any of them. His handling of the female leads is particularly worthy of praise: he gives each actress the space to inhabit her character fully, trusting performance over spectacle.

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Technical Excellence — Craft That Serves the Story
Abhijeet Chaudhari’s cinematography does something quietly brilliant throughout — it shifts visual register to match each woman’s emotional state. The warm, open frames of early scenes give way to increasingly tight, oppressive compositions as each story darkens. Light becomes a storytelling tool rather than a mere aesthetic choice.
Sanjay Sharma’s editing is the film’s unsung hero. Managing three parallel storylines across 131 minutes without confusion or drag is a serious editorial achievement, and Sharma delivers, keeping the film’s momentum consistently propulsive.
Mannan Shah’s background score is restrained and atmospheric. While the film doesn’t have a mass commercial chartbuster — a minor commercial consideration — the original compositions by Shah, Santosh R. Nair, and Rahul Suhas, with lyrics by Manoj Muntashir and Alok Ranjan Jha, serve the film’s emotional register perfectly.
Paramjeet Singh Pamma’s action choreography brings genuine physical tension to key sequences, and Juhi Talmaki’s production design successfully differentiates the visual identity of each city, keeping the three storylines geographically and emotionally distinct.
Strengths and Minor Weaknesses
What Works
- Three emotionally distinct stories told with structural clarity and sustained momentum
- Career-best performances from Ulka Gupta, Aishwarya Ojha, and Aditi Bhatia
- Raw, unflinching direction that respects the audience’s intelligence
- A supporting cast operating at full conviction from top to bottom
- Technically accomplished across every department
- A finale that delivers real catharsis after genuine emotional investment
Where It Could Be Even Stronger
- The climax, while satisfying in spirit, feels slightly rushed — the film earns a longer, more deliberate final act
- The absence of a standout commercial song is a minor note; the score compensates atmospherically but not commercially
Final Verdict — ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 5/5
The Kerala Story 2: Goes Beyond is the rare sequel that doesn’t just match its predecessor — it raises the bar. Kamakhya Narayan Singh has delivered a film made with conviction, integrity, and genuine dramatic skill. Vipul Amrutlal Shah has produced a story that needed to be told, and told it at scale without compromising its rawness.
This is what happens when a cast, a director, and a production house all believe completely in what they’re making. The result is urgent, powerful, and unforgettable. Whether you come for the performances, the story, or simply because you believe cinema should have the courage to say difficult things — The Kerala Story 2: Goes Beyond delivers on every count.
Must Watch. In cinemas now.
What is the age rating of The Kerala Story 2: Goes Beyond?
The film holds a UA (Universal with Adult supervision) certificate.
Can we watch The Kerala Story 2: Goes Beyond with kids?
This film is not recommended for children. The subject matter is intense and emotionally harrowing. Teenagers aged 16 and above may watch with parental guidance, but the film is primarily intended for adult audiences.
Is The Kerala Story 2: Goes Beyond based on a true story?
Yes, the film is inspired by real documented incidents across India. While the three central characters — Surekha, Divya, and Neha — are fictional, the filmmakers have stated the narratives are drawn from actual reported cases, continuing the fact-inspired approach of the original The Kerala Story (2023).
Do I need to watch the first film before this one?
No. The Kerala Story 2 features entirely new characters and storylines and works as a fully standalone film.

