3BHK Story :-
A middle-class family’s 20-year journey to own their dream home in Chennai, repeatedly thrown off course by life’s unexpected financial setbacks.

3BHK Release Date, Trailor, Songs, Cast :-
Release Date | 4 July 2025 |
Language | Tamil |
Genre | Drama |
Duration | 2h 20min |
Cast | Siddharth, R. Sarathkumar, Meetha Raghunath, Yogi Babu, Aarti Desai, Devayani, Chaithra J. Achar |
Director | Sri Ganesh |
Writer | Sri Ganesh |
Cinematography | Dinesh Krishnan |
Music | Amrit Ramnath |
Producer | Arun Vishwa |
Production | Shanthi Talkies |
Certificate | 16+ |
3BHK Review :-
What happens when a middle-class family’s to-do list gets the cinematic treatment? You get 3 BHK—a well-meaning tale that ends up feeling like watching paint dry on the walls of an apartment you can never afford to call your own.

Sri Ganesh captures the Vasudevan (Sarathkumar) family’s two-decade-long, Sisyphean pursuit of owning a 3 BHK home. Just as Vasu and his family inch closer to their dream, life inevitably knocks them back—be it hefty capitation fees for their underachieving son Prabhu (Siddharth), the expenses of daughter Aarthi’s (a wonderfully restrained Meetha) wedding, or mounting medical bills. Each time, their progress is undone with almost cruel predictability, turning their dream into a never-ending cycle of hope and setback.

There’s an undeniable warmth in watching this family navigate the ups and downs of familiar middle-class struggles. Prabhu’s hesitant journey from a disillusioned IT employee to someone finally pursuing his passion for mechanical engineering feels authentic and quietly inspiring. And yes—Siddharth somehow still pulls off playing both a schoolboy and an adult with ease. Sarathkumar brings real depth and emotion to the role of the constantly anxious father, grounding the film with his presence. Devayani, as his wife Shanti, delivers a serviceable performance, though she remains somewhat in the background compared to the rest.
3BHK Trailor :-
But here, familiarity gives way to fatigue. The narrative unfolds with mechanical precision: the well-intentioned father making ill-advised choices, the underachieving son who eventually finds his purpose, the selfless daughter whose own ambitions are quietly shelved. Each beat lands exactly when you expect it to. Even Yogi Babu’s brief appearance as a quirky broker brings only a few fleeting chuckles, doing little to break the monotony.
Final Thought
The film tries your patience, offering little more than moments of familiarity. Sure, the struggles will feel relatable. And yes, there’s a quiet appreciation for the restraint shown in avoiding overblown drama. But mere recognition doesn’t equate to emotional engagement. 3 BHK builds its story much like its namesake apartment—practical, predictable, and ultimately uninspired.
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