Vaayai Moodi Pesavum

Speak with the mouth shut) is a 2014 Indian satirical romantic comedy film directed by Balaji Mohan.

Produced by Varun Manian and S. Sashikanth under their respective production houses, Radiance Media Group and YNOT Studios, the film stars Dulquer Salmaan and Nazriya Nazim.

The film's technical crew includes newcomer Sean Roldan as the music director, Soundararajan as the cinematographer and Abhinav Sunder Nayak as the editor respectively.

As the mute flu spreads across the city, the state government sends Health Minister Sundaralingam to Panimalai to take care of the situation.

She does not agree to this, and Aravind challenges her that if he successfully stops the feud between Bhoomesh and Ravi just by means of speaking, Anjana should talk openly with Vinodh to sort out their issues.

Aravind tries so many ways to stop the feud between Bhoomesh's fans and the Drinkers Association, but it ends up in an even bitter fight.

Aravind and his friend Sathish kidnap Adhikesavan and leave him in his son's house, making a close relationship.

[5] Principal photography began in Munnar on 4 November 2013, with Madhoo joining the cast, making her comeback in the Tamil and Malayalam film industries.

He described the fictional flu, which renders people incapable of speaking, as a "metaphor for society’s refusal to communicate freely, which, I believe, is the root cause of all problems — personal, social and political.

[13] The audio launch of the Tamil version was released on 14 March 2014,[14] at the film's with Mani Ratnam being the chief guest for the event.

"[18] Vaayai Moodi Pesavum and its Malayalam version, Samsaaram Aarogyathinu Haanikaram were released worldwide on 25 April 2014.

[23] The Times of India gave the film 4/5 and wrote, "Vaayai Moodi Pesavum is truly an ambitious effort, at least by Indian cinema standards, and what's truly heartening is that Balaji Mohan succeeds in his attempt.

[25] IANS also gave 3.5/5 and called it "an almost brilliant film that contradicts itself at several junctures for reasons that are never explained and left to be figured out by the viewer".

[26] 3.5/5 was the rating given Rediff.com that wrote, "A totally new concept coupled with the director’s unique narrative style and a screenplay loaded with satire and comedy, makes Vaayai Moodi Pesavum, a thought-provoking and thoroughly enjoyable film".

[27] In contrast, Gautaman Bhaskaran of the Hindustan Times gave 2/5 and wrote, "For a good part, the film runs without dialogues, though the loud, almost irritatingly intrusive, background score robs the work of, what could have been otherwise, beautiful silence.

"[28] Aswin J Kumar of The Times of India gave the Malayalam version a rating of one-and-a-half out of five stars and opined that " At the end what we feel for this film and its director is the same emotion we reserve for a naughty kid who just wandered into a dense forest and just lost his way".