Tara Sutaria has addressed the growing speculation around the repeated postponements of Toxic: A Fairy Tale for Grown-Ups, insisting that the delays stem from ambition rather than uncertainty. Speaking during media interactions at Cannes, the actor described the Yash-led action drama as a project designed for a significantly larger global rollout, adding that the additional time would ultimately strengthen the film’s release strategy.
“The reasons for the delay are valid,” Tara said, noting that a production mounted at this scale requires careful coordination across international markets. Industry conversations around Toxic have intensified in recent months, particularly after the project drew attention at CinemaCon, where its positioning as a globally mounted Indian action title became clearer.
Directed by Geetu Mohandas, Toxic marks Tara’s first collaboration with both the filmmaker and Yash. The actor spoke warmly about the experience of working under Geetu Mohandas, describing the director’s filmmaking approach as deeply intentional and emotionally grounded. Tara added that the atmosphere on set felt unusually collaborative for a large-scale commercial production, with the women characters carrying significant narrative weight rather than functioning as supporting presences around the male lead.
Tara, who plays a character named Rebecca, remained guarded about specific plot details but hinted at the film’s tonal scale and visual ambition. In one of the more widely discussed moments from her interaction, she teased what she called an “Avengers-like” sequence involving the film’s female characters, suggesting that Toxic aims to deliver spectacle through ensemble staging rather than conventional action tropes.
Produced by KVN Productions and Monster Mind Creations, Toxic also stars Nayanthara, Kiara Advani, Huma Qureshi, and Rukmini Vasanth. The film is being simultaneously shot in Kannada and English, with plans for a multilingual international release. While the makers are yet to announce a revised release date, Tara maintained that the wait would be worthwhile, describing Toxic as “fearless,” “fabulous,” and unlike anything she has previously worked on.