The businessman sends thugs. A cat-and-mouse chase through the rain-drenched estate ensues. Pavi, using his knowledge of the house’s secret passages (built by a paranoid planter), outsmarts them one by one. In a final confrontation, Mala records the businessman confessing via a hidden phone – a lesson Pavi taught her: “Always have evidence before revenge.”
He smiles – for the first time in years. “To teach again. Real students this time.”
Pavi is no ordinary watchman. He was once a university Guru (professor) of archaeology. A scandal (planted evidence of theft) destroyed his career. Now he lives in a single room of the bungalow, polishing old wooden furniture, reading decaying books, and talking to no one.
She holds up the book’s dedication page: “To Pavi – the Caretaker of Lost Souls.” A new caretaker arrives at Mala Bhavanam. He finds Pavi’s diary. The last line: “Every house has a ghost. Sometimes, the ghost is just a truth waiting for a guru to set it free.” Themes: Redemption, teacher-student bond, truth vs. silence, the hills as a character.
One stormy night, a young woman arrives on foot, drenched: (25, sharp, but trembling). She claims her car broke down. Pavi, against his instinct, lets her stay.
Since no official movie by that exact name exists as of my current knowledge (as of 2026), I will craft a based on the evocative keywords: Guru (master/teacher), Pavi (a name, possibly short for Pavithran), Caretaker , 2024 , Mala (hill or garland, or a female name), in the style of a realistic Malayalam thriller-drama.
Here is the story of Logline: A mysterious caretaker of an abandoned hilltop estate becomes the reluctant guru to a young woman haunted by her past, but both are trapped in a web of lies, ghosts, and a buried crime. Full Story: Part 1: The Arrival at Mala
One night, Pavi finds her crying over an old photograph hidden in a wall cavity: the photo shows a young man (Mala’s deceased brother, Unni) with the Dubai businessman – and a bloodstained artifact.