For decades, the Kannada film industry—affectionately known as Sandalwood—has painted romance in broad, predictable strokes. The archetype was simple: the stoic, all-sacrificing hero; the virtuous, coy heroine; a villainous obstacle; and the triumphant, monogamous "happily ever after." From the legendary Dr. Rajkumar’s devotional loyalty to the early 2000s rom-coms of Puneeth Rajkumar, love on screen was sacred, eternal, and strictly between two people.
In a private roundtable conducted for this article, five upcoming Kannada actors (three men, two women) were asked: “Would you act in a film where your character is in a happy, functional open relationship?”
This is the hypocrisy that modern Kannada storytelling has yet to resolve. A true open relationship storyline would require the heroine to have the same liberty—and that, for the traditional male fanbase, remains a bridge too far.
