Kutti Pisasu(2010)
Kutti Pisasu is a 2010 Indian multilingual fantasy horror film directed by Rama Narayanan. The cast includes Ramya Krishnan as Goddess Kaali, Sangeetha as Gayatri, Kaveri as Savithri, and Baby Nidha as Priya. The story follows a young girl who becomes possessed by a vengeful spirit after a goddess withdraws her protection. The film was simultaneously produced in Tamil, Telugu (Cara Majaka), and Kannada (Bombat Car). It blends family drama with supernatural thrills and a moral about love overcoming evil. The film was released on May 7, 2010, and has a runtime of 2 hours 25 minutes. It received mixed reviews but remains notable for its multilingual production and fantasy elements.
Quick Facts
- Streaming on
- Zee5
- Theatrical Release
- 7 May 2010
- Director
- Rama Narayanan
- Language
- Tamil
- Runtime
- 2h 25m
- Rating
- 4.5/10
Storyline
A sweet little girl named Priya is protected by Goddess Kaali. When Kaali removes her shield, a vengeful spirit named Savithri possesses Priya. Savithri wants revenge on the people who murdered her. Gayatri, Priya's mother, must fight to save her daughter. She uses love and faith to break the curse and free Priya.
“When a goddess steps back, evil steps in”
Film Details
Parental Guide
Where to Watch
Vibe & Tags
Cast & Crew




Reunion Meter
Frequent partnerships reunited for Kutti Pisasu
Cast reunions in this film: Nassar & Delhi Ganesh (21 films together), Delhi Ganesh & Deva (21 films together), Nassar & Manobala (16 films together), Nassar & Deva (16 films together), Nassar & Ramya Krishnan (15 films together), and Livingston & Deva (13 films together).
Trivia
- The film was shot simultaneously in three languages with the same cast, but each version had a different title and slightly altered plot points.
- Director Rama Narayanan was known for low-budget fantasy films, and this movie reused special effects footage from his earlier 1990s projects.
- The transforming car prop was a modified Ambassador car, a vehicle rarely used for such sci-fi concepts in Indian cinema.
- Despite its fantasy theme, the film's climax was filmed at real-life locations like the Vandalur Zoo in Chennai.
- The Hindi dubbed version, 'Magic Robot', was directly released on television and home video, skipping a theatrical run.
- Actress Swetha Menon, who played the female lead, was primarily a Malayalam film star and this was one of her few Tamil roles.
- The film's promotional material highlighted the giant snake, which was created using basic animatronics and costume effects.




