The film stars his son Jiiva, Kashmira Pardeshi and Pragya Nagra in lead roles.
The film's music and score were composed by Shaan Rahman with cinematography handled by Sakthi Saravanan and editing done by N. B.
Film starts in 2050 where ex politician Adaikalam encounters a lot of prostitutes and a man called Chris Gayle.
Adaikalam revealed he was going to be the future MLA until his friend, whom he considers a younger brother to him, called Karthik has ruined his life.
Jamuna's father Velayudhan Kutty, wants his daughter to marry a man who is working in Dubai.
Karthi could not decide which sister he wanted, so he tried to woo Yamuna while also keeping a distance from Jamuna who is actively pursuing him.
The next day, Adaikalam thinks the night became successful, but Karthi explained that she wanted to show her family album to him.
Karthi tries to make it up which Adaikalam suggested that they should kidnap her grandmother so that he can actually convince her his side of the story.
While this occurred, Adaikalam takes full responsibility and told her not to blame Karthi because he genuinely loves her, yet Yamuna ignores him.
Karthi ends up finding out that Yamuna is getting engaged to a man from Dubai and stood outside of her house.
The next day, the whole neighbourhood is talking about Karthi and Yamuna's relationship, which Karthi's father Gopal begs him to break up with Yamuna because this would save their reputation and for the sake of his younger sister Kavitha, in case of a future marriage prospect for her.
The night of her reception, Karthi did not go but Gopal felt bad and asked him to have fun with his friends instead of being sad.
Adaikalam asked for a destress medicine which he instead had a viagra, hence when he saw Karthi dressing up as a woman, he became attracted to her.
[5] Shaan Rahman composed the soundtrack and background score of the film while collaborating with actor Jiiva and director Santhosh Rajan for the first time.
[15] A critic for The Indian Express wrote that except for a few 18+ verses, it would have been a family-friendly film; overall, though there are some ups and downs, it's a decently entertaining movie that's fun to watch and history matters.
[16] Ashik A of Samayam wrote that although the story is already seen and used to, it has earned pass marks as an entertaining film that does not fight with comedy scenes".