Vanamagan

Son of the Forest) is a 2017 Indian Tamil-language action adventure film written and directed by A. L. Vijay.

The film stars Ravi Mohan and Sayyeshaa, with Prakash Raj, Thambi Ramaiah, and Varun in supporting roles.

No hospital in Andaman would treat the tribal person, so Kavya decides to bring him to Chennai.

At that moment, Vaasi barges into the room and finds Vicky forcefully holding Kavya's hands.

At the hospital where Vicky gets treated, Rajasekhar is told that the former has a fractured bone in his neck and will have to wear a cervical collar for life.

Vaasi beats the police up and is held at gunpoint by Shanmugam, who is surprised to see that he is alive.

Shanmugam orders the police to shoot the tribe, when he suddenly hears his daughter's voice.

Suryaprakash and the officers plan to shoot Vaasi, but everyone hears a tiger growling, and the animal gruesomely kills the commandos.

Kavya reminds Rajasekhar that Vaasi and his people are in trouble as a big company is trying to snatch her land.

Rajasekhar reveals that it is Kavya who has done this and shows her the documents that she signed (at the beginning of the film).

[4][5] Later in November 2015, it was reported that A. L. Vijay would direct a film starring Ravi Mohan in the lead role.

The actor confirmed that the duo would begin work on the project in the middle of 2016, following the completion of his other films.

[6] The film was reported to be about a man who escapes from the lost kingdom of Kumari Kandam.

[7] In May 2016, Vijay confirmed that the project would begin later in the year and revealed that the film would be shot extensively in the Andaman Islands.

[10] Sanjay Bharathi and Varun also signed on to work on the film, with the latter revealing that he would play the heroine's love interest and that Ravi would portray a tribal man who finds himself in the city.

Due to the announcement of the film industry strike on 30 May 2017, the producer has postponed the theatrical release to 23 June 2017.

[15] Baradwaj Rangan of Film Companion wrote "Vanamagan gradually becomes terribly serious, and a comic adventure turns into a tiresomely earnest drama .