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Categories => Entertainment & Celebrities => Topic started by: Raj on Apr 05, 2026, 08:22 AM

Title: Loosu Ponnu trope returns HARD!
Post by: Raj on Apr 05, 2026, 08:22 AM
My dislike for "Ha Ha Hasini" is beyond words; she feels like the worst thing to happen to women since men themselves. Loosu Ponnu (called Pichi Pilla in Telugu, I think) was invented by guys who didn't understand women, shaping her the way they wanted women to be rather than how they actually are. This reinforces harmful stereotypes – that women aren't smart, can't make rational choices, are intellectually non‑threatening, childish, harmless, overly emotional, and always need a man to guide or "manage" them.

For a while, during the action‑gangster era of Kollywood pushed by Kokesh Lanagaraj, the Loosu Ponnu trope faded. But with the recent wave of "coming‑of‑age" and "Insta Reels" style movies, it's creeping back, dressed up as "cute" and "bubbly". It's not cute; it's lazy writing.

Before anyone says "wait till the movie releases", I know Vignesh's style – he loves the Loosu Ponnu. Just watch Naanum Rowdy Dhaan, or trust my word.

[Check out this post too](https://www.reddit.com/r/kollywood/comments/1p1sqj7/the_loosu_ponnu_trope_was_the_worst_thing_to/). The ending of that post reads funny today.

(https://i.ibb.co/tpsjW4Z0/hjwkeaolv6tg1.png)
Title: Re: Loosu Ponnu trope returns HARD!
Post by: Rajat on Apr 05, 2026, 08:22 AM
Guess which of the idiots are promoting and enjoying it.
Title: Re: Loosu Ponnu trope returns HARD!
Post by: Sharmila on Apr 05, 2026, 08:22 AM
Varsha, please make a part 2 of Bad Girl.
Title: Re: Loosu Ponnu trope returns HARD!
Post by: Monica on Apr 05, 2026, 08:22 AM
It all started with Doctor; surprisingly every female character there was a Loosu Ponnu.
Title: Re: Loosu Ponnu trope returns HARD!
Post by: Lokesh on Apr 05, 2026, 08:22 AM
Hard agree. This terrible trend needs to be stopped right away. Heroines should be real characters, not stereotypes. Take the side characters in Bad Girl – especially Selvi. You can see she genuinely cares about Ramya even when Ramya is doing her own thing. Selvi feels like a real person, especially in the climax monologue. She isn't a flat, one‑dimensional figure who only exists to stare at the hero.

Personally, I don't think Kural is as bad as the others. She's written as a naive girl caught in misunderstandings. Yes, she's a bit of a Loosu Ponnu, but she's handled much better than the rest, in my view.
Title: Re: Loosu Ponnu trope returns HARD!
Post by: Deepak on Apr 05, 2026, 08:22 AM
I don't think Mamitha in Dude was really a Loosu Ponnu. Honestly, Ha Ha Hasini was the only somewhat sane character in that movie. She knew what she wanted, recognized the toxic relationship and red flags, and walked away to choose herself. We don't give her credit because we dismiss anyone who acts "cute". I agree that it's annoying, but if she stopped trying to be cute, she would be a fairly well‑written role, unlike Santosh.
Title: Re: Loosu Ponnu trope returns HARD!
Post by: Madhav on Apr 05, 2026, 08:22 AM
"She was the worst thing to happen to women since men"

(https://i.ibb.co/LXC6MSD5/3huaa8oo77tg1.jpg)
Title: Re: Loosu Ponnu trope returns HARD!
Post by: Imran on Apr 05, 2026, 08:22 AM
I'm not sure about the first or second film (which one is the second?), but Mamitha definitely wasn't the only Loosu in that movie.
Title: Re: Loosu Ponnu trope returns HARD!
Post by: Rani on Apr 05, 2026, 08:22 AM
Mamitha in Dude wasn't a Loosu Ponnu at all; she was more of a sociopath, if anything.
Title: Re: Loosu Ponnu trope returns HARD!
Post by: Niraj on Apr 05, 2026, 08:22 AM
It was Kokesh Lanagaraj who revived the trope with Coolie. Look at Preethi – she's completely clueless throughout the film.

(https://i.ibb.co/KpNR0PZG/lp1zboqec7tg1.jpg)
Title: Re: Loosu Ponnu trope returns HARD!
Post by: Hitesh on Apr 05, 2026, 08:22 AM
It feels like whenever filmmakers try to make romances for the younger crowd, they default to these characters. That's nonsense. Look at movies like Premalu or Little Hearts – both aimed at younger audiences, yet the female leads aren't Loosu Ponnu. They still reference youth culture, but the women are more than a male fantasy. If we want rom‑coms that click across languages, we need to move past these outdated archetypes.