Tamilyogi — Kuruthipunal
That night, the two officers, now deep in enemy territory, tail a cargo truck that moves like a ghost through the rain‑slicked streets. The truck stops at an abandoned warehouse, guarded by men in plain clothes with rifles hidden beneath their jackets. Inside, they find a , humming faintly—a miniature nuclear device, its core pulsing like a dying heart.
Aravind, remembering his father's words— “A true soldier fights for the nation, not for men who betray it” —decides to go beyond his orders. He sends a to the Navy, but the signal is intercepted and scrambled by the rogue faction. The stakes rise: not only must they stop the warhead, they must also expose the betrayal within their own ranks. Part III – The Heart of the Storm The climax erupts on the night of the planned launch. The *INS Vijay is anchored just beyond the 12‑nautical‑mile limit, its torpedo tubes primed. On the deck, the terrorist leader Raja , a cold‑blooded former army officer, watches the countdown on a handheld device: 00:02:15 .
Aravind and Mahadevan escape, but not before the nuclear device is to self‑detonate after 48 hours, a timer ticking like a metronome of doom. Part II – The Hunt Becomes a Chase Back on their covert base, Admiral Raghavan receives a grim report: the terrorists have hijacked a research submarine , the *INS Vijay , and plan to launch the warhead into the Bay of Bengal, where it would create a massive tsunami. Kuruthipunal Tamilyogi
The enemy submarine is a —its hull coated with a new type of anechoic paint that renders it invisible to conventional sonar. The chase becomes a battle of wits. Mahadevan hacks into the enemy’s communication channel, discovering that the terrorists are being backed by a rogue faction within the Indian intelligence community —a group that sees the warhead as a bargaining chip for political power.
Aravind, now a decorated hero, returns to his quiet life, but the experience has changed him. He visits his father’s grave, laying a single marigold, whispering, “The blood that ran through my veins today was not just my own—it belonged to every Indian who believes in peace.” That night, the two officers, now deep in
They board a midnight train, their uniforms swapped for civilian attire—Aravind as a photojournalist with a battered Nikon, Mahadevan as a tech‑savvy reporter with a laptop forever flashing “loading…” They disembark at a chaotic railway station, the cacophony of vendors and the scent of fried dosa masking the tension beneath.
Prologue – The Shadow of a Threat The night sky over the Indian Ocean is a black canvas streaked with the faint glimmer of distant stars. On a secret Indian Navy base, a small team of elite officers gathers around a dimly lit map. The air is thick with the smell of oil and the low hum of generators. Admiral R. Raghavan, a veteran of three wars, points to a tiny dot on the Indian coastline. “A terrorist cell, codenamed ‘Red‑Hawk,’ has smuggled a nuclear warhead onto Indian soil. If they succeed, the whole sub‑continent will be plunged into chaos.” Two men step forward. Lieutenant Commander Aravind (the stoic, disciplined officer played by Kamal Haasan) and Lieutenant Mahadevan (the sharp‑eyed, quick‑thinking operative played by Nassar). Their mission is simple in description but impossible in execution: infiltrate the cell, retrieve the warhead, and neutralise the threat—all without the knowledge of the outside world. Part I – Into the Lion’s Den Aravind and Mahadevan are briefed on “Operation Red‑Storm.” Their cover: civilian journalists travelling to the bustling port city of Chennai , where the terrorist network is believed to be using a fishing harbor as a front. Aravind, remembering his father's words— “A true soldier
At a modest tea stall, they meet , a fiery journalist for a local daily, who unknowingly becomes their link to the underworld. She tells them about a series of suspicious shipments arriving at the Muttukadu harbour—containers marked with an obscure symbol: a black swan .