‘Satan: The Dark’ is written and directed by Manikandan Ramalingam and was released in cinemas on March 27 this year.Following its theatrical release, the film is now preparing to reach a wider audience through its OTT debut. The movie features FJ, Ayraa, Chandini Tamilarasan, Mona Bedre, and Sreeja Ravi in important roles.
Where to stream ‘Satan: The Dark’
According to OTT Release Twitter forum, ‘Satan: The Dark’ will begin streaming on Prime Video from May 8, 2026. The streaming release comes nearly six weeks after the film’s theatrical debut.The story of ‘Satan: The Dark’ unfolds across two timelines and centres on a terrifying supernatural curse connected to ritualistic sorcery. During the East India Company era, a dark ritual performed in the hilly region of Hasthinapuram goes horribly wrong and unleashes an evil force.In the present timeline, Marcelin, played by Mona Bedre, starts behaving violently after falling under the influence of a mysterious supernatural entity. Her disturbing transformation begins affecting her young daughter Alisha who is portrayed by Ayraa Palak, as well as others around them. The film then follows the attempts to rescue Alisha from a curse.Crew behind ‘Satan: The Dark’The technical department of the film includes several notable names. Bala G Ramasamy worked as the cinematographer, while the music was composed by Aswin Krishna. Editing was handled by Rajkumar and Kovai Abishek DFT.Surendran Selvaraj served as the art director for the project, and the action choreography was designed by Danger Mani. The sound design was created by Aswathaman Siva, while the final sound mix was completed by AM Senthamizhan.ETimes verdict for ‘Satan: The Dark’ETimes reviewed the film and commented on both its performances and screenplay execution. The review noted, “The occult and Christian imagery peppered throughout could have added texture, but it sits there as set dressing. Fredrick John and Ayraa Palak deliver decent turns, selling the fear and panic their roles demand. Chandini Tamilarasan, as a woman who turns to Satan worship and cuts out her own tongue, is the one genuinely unsettling presence. Mona Bedre, Sreeja Ravi, and Edward are adequate.At 144 minutes, the film overstays considerably. A tighter cut might have preserved whatever claustrophobic tension the setting generates. Instead, it stretches and defaults to the same gimmicky shocks until they stop registering.”








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