[1] The film stars Thambi Ramaiah and Samuthirakani in the lead roles and produced by Suresh Kamatchi of V House Productions.
[2] Other cast members include Suveta Shrimpton, Deepa Shankar, Daniel Annie Pope, Pala.
The technical work consists of cinematography by Kedarnath and S. Gopinath, background music by Sai Dinesh, audio by Tapas Nayak, and editing by R Sudharshan.
The diary reveals the beggar's true identity: Murugappa Sendrayar, a self-made business magnate and devotee of Lord Murugar.
Sendrayar faces political pressure to relinquish his company's rights to an influential politician, brokered by Thamaraiselvi IAS.
Enraged, he banishes his men and so Antony and his associates, seeking revenge, kidnap Albert and murder him in the Kodaikanal forest.
Believing her false promises, Pazhaniyappan first transfers the properties to his name and also orders the doctor to kill his father in the hospital, fearing that Sendrayar's tarnished reputation will ruin their family's image.
Sendrayar's men reveal to Kadappan that another car had followed them on the day of Albert's murder, and they suspect Sengundran's involvement.
Anandan brings the mentally unstable Sendrayar to Pazhaniyappan's residence, but he refuses to accept his father, citing shame and embarrassment.
[4] In the first-look poster that was released on 8 November 2022, it was revealed that Umapathy would be directing the film, while Thambi Ramaiah will be handling the story, dialogues, lyrics, and music.
[9] The film is produced by Suresh Kamatchi under his V House productions banner[10] and the technical work consists of cinematography by Kedarnath and S. Gopinath, background music by Sai Dinesh, audio by Tapas Nayak, and editing by R Sudharshan.
[19] Akshay Kumar of Cinema Express gave 2.5/5 stars and wrote "Despite the hits and misses, Rajakili is watchable because it does a good job of convincing us that staying true to one person is still a cool idea in relationships, in an era that has redefined loyalty with lifestyle changes like 'ethical non-monogamy'.
[21] Roopa Radhakrishnan of Times of India gave 1.5/5 stars and wrote "Rajakili is a lost cause right from the beginning, and, sadly, there is hardly anything vindicable about the film.