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Vishnu is not a stereotypical villain who drinks or beats Janani visibly. Instead, his abuse is psychological: constant gaslighting, emotional withdrawal, and control over her movements. The film uses DID as a metaphor for a woman’s survival mechanism against an abusive marriage—fracturing her identity to withstand an intolerable reality.
My3 : A Disjointed Exploration of Suburban Alienation and Post-Modern Identity My3 Tamil Movie
The character Nila is a photographer, an observer. The film uses the camera lens as a motif for self-examination. Janani “watches” herself through Nila’s photographs, suggesting that self-awareness is the first step toward healing. Vishnu is not a stereotypical villain who drinks
The film follows Janani (Shruti Haasan), a young woman living a seemingly idyllic life with her loving husband, Vishnu (Shiva), in a high-end Chennai suburb. However, Janani suffers from dissociative identity disorder (DID), commonly known as multiple personality disorder. My3 : A Disjointed Exploration of Suburban Alienation
Released in 2015, My3 is a Tamil psychological drama film directed by debutant Krishnakumar Ramasamy. The film deviates significantly from mainstream Tamil cinema’s formula of romance, action, and melodrama, instead opting for a non-linear narrative exploring loneliness, voyeurism, and fractured identity in urban Chennai. Starring Shruti Haasan in a triple role alongside comed-turned-actor Shiva, My3 was promoted as an “experimental film” but ultimately faced critical and commercial failure. This paper analyzes the film’s plot structure, performances, and the reasons behind its lack of resonance with audiences.
The film was notable for Anirudh Ravichander’s background score and songs. The track “Nee Paartha Vizhigal” became a chartbuster, praised for its melancholic tune and Shruti Haasan’s vocal performance. Ironically, the song’s romantic visuals (featuring Haasan and Shiva) misled audiences into expecting a conventional love story, creating a strong expectation-reality gap.