Poster of the film Don't Tell Mother

Don't Tell Mother

Family Drama English


Aakash, a 9-year-old boy is subjected to physical violence at school by his Math teacher and ends up hiding it from his strict but caring mother. When tragedy arises, irreplaceable bonds are forged between Aakash, his mother and his innocent younger brother, Adi in this tender family drama set in the 90s Bangalore.

Cast:Siddarth Swaroop, Aishwarya Dinesh, Anirudh P Keserker, Karthik Nagarajan, Sachit Murthy,
Director:Anoop Lokkur
Writer:Anoop Lokkur
Editor:Pavan Bhat
Camera:Matthew Jenkins

Guild Reviews

Image of scene from the film Don't Tell Mother

A Charming Tale of Growing Up in 1990s Bangalore

FCG Member Reviewer Prathyush Parasuraman
Prathyush Parasuraman | The Hollywood Reporter India
Sat, September 20 2025

Writer-director Anoop Lokkur’s debut Kannada feature had its world premiere at the 30th Busan International Film Festival

Maybe the Polish poet Czeslaw Milosz was right—“When a writer is born into a family, the family is finished.” Artists look at their past as grist they can reframe on their terms. And this anxiety of re-writing one’s personal history sometimes shines through—the best memoirs are, after all, shameless and transgressive, and timid are those that cave under the weight of this trespassing anxiety. or writer-director Anoop Lokkur’s debut Kannada feature Don’t Tell Mother, which had its world premiere at the 30th Busan International Film Festival, this anxiety has been swept aside and muscled under by nostalgia. Set in Jayanagar, Bangalore in the 1990s—a significant Brahmin bastion—the film follows two siblings, Akaash (Siddharth Swaroop) and Adi (Anirudh P. Keserker), young boys inching towards self-hood, as they make space for their childhood alongside punctures of parental influence and interference, school-day routines, classmate cacophony, and the sudden calls and catfights with neighbourhood friends. They live next to a mosque, so the azaan becomes part of their life’s sounds—one the film makes forceful, by cutting to images of the chanting minarets. (In a post-Babri 1990s, when the Infosys IPO is being launched, you feel the film will say more about this, but it doesn’t, and lets these images, like that of Muharram, puncture the proceedings as a form of spectacle without discourse.)

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