%23thadam Exclusive 〈Full Version〉

Let’s talk about the footprint you leave behind—not just in the physical mud, but in the lives you touch. In Thadam , we meet two men who look exactly alike but harbor entirely different souls. One is driven by rage and circumstance; the other by love and logic. The police—and the audience—spend the entire runtime chasing the who instead of the why .

The “trace” (the evidence) is not just DNA or fingerprints. The trace is your habit . Your reaction . Your character under pressure.

Drop a comment below: Do you think you’ve met your “twin” in life? Or are you still trying to figure out which version of yourself is the real one? %23thadam

And for yourself? Stop trying to kill the "other" you. That twin isn't going anywhere. Instead, follow your own trace backward. Ask yourself:

Because in the end, the truth isn't just about catching the suspect. It's about recognizing that the mirror sometimes reflects a stranger. Let’s talk about the footprint you leave behind—not

We wear masks for our bosses, our families, our old friends, and our lovers. After a while, the lines blur. You might wake up one day and wonder: Is this my life, or am I just a copy living out the script of the person I used to be?

But if there’s one thing the cinematic masterpiece Thadam (translated to “The Trace”) taught us, it is this: Your reaction

Isn’t that how we live? We judge people based on a single snapshot. We see a person’s social media post, a moment of anger, or a single mistake, and we assume we know the full trace.