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Guild Reviews

Image of scene from the film Thaai Kizhavi
FCG Rating for the film Thaai Kizhavi: 80/100
Thaai Kizhavi

Comedy, Drama (Tamil)

Pavunuthaayi is a fiercely independent, intimidating elderly woman in a rural village, known for being tough, ruthless, and blunt-especially as a moneylender whose strict enforcement of dues makes her feared by locals.

Cast: Radikaa Sarathkumar, Singampuli, Aruldoss, Balasaravanan, Munishkanth, Muthukumar, Raichal Rabecca Philip, Ilavarasu, George Mariyan
Director: Sivakumar Murugesan
Writer: Sivakumar Murugesan


FCG Member Reviewer Kirubhakar Purushothaman
Kirubhakar Purushothaman | News 18
Radikaa steals the show in Sivakarthikeyan's riveting film

Sat, February 28 2026

Sivakumar Murugesan's directorial debut is as warm and wry as the village it inhabits, and it earns every laugh it gets

From Disney’s Snow White to our own Vidaathu Karuppu, the evil grandma stereotype shines, making an old woman the face of terror and crudeness. Indian TV and its serials have furthered this trope of this evil old matriarch harassing the hapless daughter-in-law. On the other hand, there’s another popular archetype of a benevolent old woman, who “melts like a candle” to produce light for those around them. Manormama has been the quintessential choice of Tamil filmmakers for this cardboard cutout. The scene from Shankar’s Gentleman, of her telling her son (Arjun Sarja), “Naan irukaen pa” (“I’m there for you”). She is the all-giving mother, and men are supposed to find her godly love and care in their potential mates.

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FCG Member Reviewer Avinash Ramachandran
Avinash Ramachandran | The New Indian Express
Radikaa Sarathkumar powers a grandmother’s tale rooted in truth, honesty, and a whole lot of fun

Fri, February 27 2026

It might seem like a poignant tale of parents and children, but it is also a film that makes you unabashedly laugh out loud

Money. In a world that is all about division, money holds the ultimate power to make you breach such hierarchies. Of course, it also results in the decimation of a few age-old structures, but that’s par for the course in a world that doesn’t wait for people to catch up. But is money really the ultimate thing? Does the presence or lack of it really determine your worth in the world? As a character in the debutant filmmaker Sivakumar Murugesan’s film says, “Has any parent refused to take care of their child because they didn’t have the financial resources?” One might think it is a poignant tale of parents and children, and how the world treats the geriatric. In a way, Thaai Kizhavi is definitely that kind of a film, but it is also a film that makes you unabashedly laugh out loud with a consistency that has been missing in Tamil cinema for quite a while.

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FCG Member Reviewer Janani K
Janani K | India Today
Womanhood, wit and Radikaa Sarathkumar in all her glory

Fri, February 27 2026

Director Sivakumar Murugesan's film, starring Radikaa Sarathkumar, Singampuli, Aruldoss and Bala Saravanan, is a hilarious drama about women's agency and breaking generational chains without ever getting preachy or melodramatic.

Imagine a foul-mouthed matriarch who terrorises everyone with her mere presence, yet delivers the most valuable lesson on independence, agency and womanhood. If you operate on social media’s version of morality, your mind will immediately question this dichotomy. But Sivakumar Murugesan’s Thaai Kizhavi grounds you, drags you back to real life and makes you laugh while quietly asking the most important question of all — what does it mean to truly live, rather than merely exist in someone else’s shadow?

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Image of scene from the film Accused
FCG Rating for the film Accused: 49/100
Accused

Thriller, Mystery, Drama (Hindi)

When a celebrated queer doctor in London is accused of sexual misconduct, her life unravels. Now under a storm of suspicion and scrutiny, her marriage fractures and the truth blurs. Her wife must decide whether to walk away, or fight for the woman the world is turning against.

Cast: Konkona Sen Sharma, Pratibha Ranta, Aditya Nanda, Sukant Goel, Sanjeeta Bhattacharya, Anuj Sachdeva, Mashhoor Amrohi, Monica Mahendru, Kallirroi Tziafeta
Director: Anubhuti Kashyap
Writer: Sima Agarwal, Yash Keshwani


FCG Member Reviewer Shomini Sen
Shomini Sen | Wion
Konkona Sen Sharma, Pratibha Rannta headline a gripping thriller that only skims the surface of #MeToo

Sat, February 28 2026

Accused, directed by Anubhuti Kashyap, is a smart thriller with queer love-story at its core. The film only scratches the surface of a complex issue like #MeToo. However, it boasts of credible performances by Konkona Sen Sharma and Pratibha Rannta.

At the onset, filmmaker Anubhuti Kashyap’s latest film Accused, featuring Konkona Sen Sharma and Pratibha Rannta as a queer couple in London, feels like a smart thriller that attempts to tell a strikingly new story. Sexual harassment at work and power dynamics in a marriage where both partners are ambitious are tropes well known. Urban romances mostly revolve around two individuals attempting to strike a balance between romance and the regular humdrum of life. However, Kashyap’s film Accused takes the familiar trope but gives it a unique twist. It has a queer couple in focus, with one of them dealing with charges of sexually harassing colleagues at her workplace. Strikingly new plot for Bollywood for sure.

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FCG Member Reviewer Anuj Kumar
Anuj Kumar | The Hindu
A perceptive take on #MeToo discourse that provokes reflection over resolution

Fri, February 27 2026

Compelling performances by Konkona Sensharma and Pratibha Ranta elevate the thriller, directed by Anubhuti Kashyap, to a thought-provoking commentary on power, perception, and the personal cost of suspicion.

These days, the Kashyaps seem keenly interested in stories that probe the steep personal toll exacted by success, ambition, and power. Even as Anurag Kashyap’s Bandar gets a date in theatres, sister Anubhuti Kashyap observes the post-#MeToo landscape through a perceptive lens in this Netflix original. A cross between psychological drama and a taut thriller, Accused stars Konkona Sensharma as Dr. Geetika Sen, a celebrated queer surgeon, and Pratibha Ranta as her partner, Dr. Meera, who has travelled from a conservative Meerut to the accepting lap of London.

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FCG Member Reviewer Bharathi Pradhan
Bharathi Pradhan | Lehren.com
Guilty of Baby Steps

Fri, February 27 2026

The intent is to normalise gay relationships, a gay marriage in this case, where the focus is on the story and not on raising eyebrows over sexual preferences. To that extent director Anubhuti Kashyap, and writers Sima Agarwal and Yash Keswani pull it off. Once Dr Geetika Sen (Konkona Sen Sharma) and “wife” Dr Meera (Pratibha Ranta) are accepted by the viewer just as casually as the people in their workplace do, it’s the investigation into a sexual misconduct case that should be the focus.

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Image of scene from the film Monarch: Legacy of Monsters S02
Monarch: Legacy of Monsters S02

Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Drama, Action & Adventure (English)

After surviving Godzilla's attack on San Francisco, Cate is shaken yet again by a shocking secret. Amid monstrous threats, she embarks on a globetrotting adventure to learn the truth about her family—and the mysterious organization known as Monarch.

Cast: Anna Sawai, Kiersey Clemons, Ren Watabe, Mari Yamamoto, Anders Holm, Joe Tippett, Wyatt Russell, Kurt Russell


FCG Member Reviewer Sonal Pandya
Sonal Pandya | Times Now, Zoom
Monsterverse Spinoff Balances New Titan With Family Drama And Lore

Fri, February 27 2026

The spinoff series from the film Godzilla (2014) delves into Titan lore and follows troubled family dynamics for the Randa family.

After two and a half years, Monarch: Legacy of Monsters returns with an answer to the cliffhanger ending of Season 1. Will Colonel Lee Shaw (Kurt Russell) be rescued from Axis Mundi? Affirmative. Kurt and son Wyatt Rusell, who plays the younger version of Lee in the past, are back as the Monsterverse spinoff series adds yet another Titan to the mix and deals with the complicated Randa family relationships now that Keiko Miura (Mari Yamamoto) has returned from the dead. Developed by Chris Black and Matt Fraction, the second season of Monarch: Legacy of Monsters tries its hand at family conflict again.

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Image of scene from the film Bridgerton S04 Part 2
Bridgerton S04 Part 2

Drama (English)

Wealth, lust, and betrayal set in the backdrop of Regency era England, seen through the eyes of the powerful Bridgerton family.

Cast: Ruth Gemmell, Luke Thompson, Yerin Ha, Luke Newton, Claudia Jessie, Florence Hunt, Will Tilston, Adjoa Andoh, Julie Andrews, Golda Rosheuvel


FCG Member Reviewer Sonal Pandya
Sonal Pandya | Times Now, Zoom
Benedict And Sophie's Romance Satisfies Amid Other Complicated Storylines

Fri, February 27 2026

The wildly addictive Regency romance series returns after a month to wrap up the love story between Benedict (Luke Thompson) and Sophie (Baek).

In the first half of Bridgerton Season 4, viewers were introduced to a magical Cinderella tale between second brother Bendect Bridgerton (Luke Thompson) and Sophie Baek (Yerin Ha) as the mysterious Lady in Silver. And at the end of the fourth episode, Benedict proposed that Sophie become his mistress. The Netflix series returns to explore the fallout of the proposal, as Benedict must decide whether to defy society and his family for the sake of love. Furthermore, other younger Bridgertons have significant goings-on in their lives as the series sets up what’s next for seasons ahead.

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Image of scene from the film Nukkad Naatak
Nukkad Naatak

Drama (Hindi)

After being caught robbing the college canteen, best friends Molshri and Shivang are expelled. To be reinstated, they must enroll five children from an impoverished slum into a local school.

Cast: Molshri, Shivang Rajpal, Danish Husain, Nirmala Hajra, Lalit Saw, Monita Sinha, Mayank Shandilya, Kishore Kumar, Jay DeYonker
Director: Tanmaya Shekhar
Writer: Tanmaya Shekhar


FCG Member Reviewer Rahul Desai
Rahul Desai | The Hollywood Reporter India
A Spirited Indie That Bridges Art and Activism

Fri, February 27 2026

Tanmaya Shekhar’s independent drama expands the Indian street-play aesthetic into a modest coming-of-age journey

t’s bittersweet when you learn of an independent film releasing against all odds. The more inspirational the journey is, the more complicated it gets for film critics who must approach it objectively. What if it’s not good, despite the sincerity and courage? What if the inventive process of making it is the best part of its legacy? What if the craft is consumed by underdog hype and passion? What if the behind-the-scenes story is more interesting than the film’s story? What sort of euphemisms might one have to use to be kinder to gutsy ‘outsider’ art? The anxiety is more heightened with a film like Tanmaya Shekhar’s Nukkad Naatak: a crowd-funded, self-promoted and self-distributed indie whose guerrilla marketing campaign features a recent cross-country road trip in a rented caravan. It wears its defiance on its sleeve. The premise is even designed to be curious and socially expressive — a sign that commentary might be used to offset a lack of depth.

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Image of scene from the film The Bluff
The Bluff

Action, Adventure (English)

When her tranquil life on a remote island is shattered by the return of her vengeful former captain, a skilled ex-pirate must confront her bloody past and unleash her deadly talents to save her family from a ruthless siege.

Cast: Priyanka Chopra Jonas, Karl Urban, Ismael Cruz Cordova, Safia Oakley-Green, Pacharo Mzembe, Greg Hatton, Gideon Mzembe, Temuera Morrison, Angela Russo-Otstot, Vedanten Naidoo
Director: Frank E. Flowers
Writer: Joe Ballarini, Frank E. Flowers


FCG Member Reviewer Priyanka Roy
Priyanka Roy | The Telegraph
Priyanka Chopra Jonas is in fine form, but The Bluff isn't

Wed, February 25 2026

Despite its thrilling sequences and Priyanka's compelling performance, the film lacks depth in emotional storytelling and thematic exploration.

Within the first few minutes of The Bluff, Priyanka Chopra Jonas slices and dices, swoops down and slashes a bunch of buccaneers in a relentless, action-packed, adrenaline-pumping sequence. Except that her character is no ordinary damsel in distress and neither is this a regular home invasion. The men who break in aren’t your streetside thugs either. They are, in fact, tied inextricably to Ercell Bodden’s past (Priyanka) and now stand to threaten her future. For Ercell wasn’t always Ercell. Known as “Bloody Mary”, she grew up sailing the seven seas as a pirate but gave up her swashbuckling, edgy ways for a domesticated life in Cayman Brac. The invasion — in which Priyanka plunges into the blood and gore with both physical solidity and psychological grit — is just the beginning of the high-stakes action that defines this Frank E. Flowers-directed film.

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Image of scene from the film Shatak
Shatak

Drama, History (Hindi)

The narrative covers a century of institutional history, revealing how a small group expanded its mission and membership to achieve widespread influence.


Director: Aashish Mall
Writer: Anil Agarwal, Utsav Dan, Rohit Gahlowt


FCG Member Reviewer Tatsam Mukherjee
Tatsam Mukherjee | The Wire
An AI Slop-Filled, Shoddy Propaganda Tribute to RSS's Centenary

Wed, February 25 2026

It represents the ‘i’ in irony and the ‘OG’ in hagiography

Very little of Aashish Mall’s Shatak looks real. I’m not talking just historical authenticity here, or the conspicuous name-dropping of ‘leftist’ freedom fighters (all of them, obviously in awe of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh or the RSS). Most of Mall’s film looks enhanced like the tacky green-screens on primetime news. Most characters wander around like AI slop, speaking with pauses – without showing the slightest bits of humanity. Walking out of Mall’s film, one of my thoughts was if the film was an exhibit for the India AI Impact Summit held in Delhi. If that was the case, what fresh hell it would mean for the nation already grappling with a dozen controversies brewing because of the event. Would Sam Altman have felt pressured to give it a standing ovation, seeing the Indian Prime Minister sitting adjacent to him, if the film screened there? Mall’s film feels like a 112-minute reel created using AI, chronicling the good/better/best anecdotes of the far-right organisation – without the slightest hint of curiosity. The aim is not to find out about how the RSS came into being, as much as kissing the feet of its founding fathers.

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Image of scene from the film Members of the Problematic Family
Members of the Problematic Family

Drama, Family (Tamil)

A man dies young. Funeral rites – yes; mourning – not so much. A death that stirs and shakes things up. A film that shows the violence of family relationships with uncanny subtlety and verve, the pendulum of void and solace.

Cast: Karuththadaiyaan, Ara. Ajith Kumar, Kanchana Senthil, T Paneer Selvam, Saravana Siddharth, Hari Krishnan Senthil, Uvesri, Thiyagu, Ram Kumar, Ramesh
Director: R Gowtham
Writer: R Gowtham


FCG Member Reviewer Aditya Shrikrishna
Aditya Shrikrishna | Independent Film Critic
(Writing for Mint)
Introduces new grammar to Tamil film

Wed, February 25 2026

R Gowtham's film, which premiered at the 2026 Berlinale, is a raw, unflinching portrait of a family rationing grief and despair

A new dissenting voice emerges in Tamil cinema. R Gowtham’s debut Tamil feature, Members of the Problematic Family, premiered at the 76th Berlin International Film Festival last week in the Forum section. Everything about this film is distinct yet unfamiliar, beginning with its title. The Tamil title, Sikkalana Kudumbathin Uruppinargal, a literal translation, rolls off the tongue. For decades we’ve had the word kudumbam (family) in Tamil film titles that have often alluded to the spotless, divine status accorded to the unit. But here is a film that makes no such promise. It invites you not to witness a few days in the life of irascible characters but just human beings who, as fate would have it, need to function as a society sanctioned order.

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Image of scene from the film Tu Meri Main Tera Main Tera Tu Meri
FCG Rating for the film Tu Meri Main Tera Main Tera Tu Meri: 36/100
Tu Meri Main Tera Main Tera Tu Meri

Romance, Comedy (Hindi)

When a carefree NRI wedding planner and a headstrong novelist collide during a wild summer in Croatia, sparks fly in ways neither expected. What begins as playful clashes soon transforms into something deeper – only to be tested when love, family, and tradition pull them in opposite directions.

Cast: Kartik Aaryan, Ananya Panday, Arjan Panwar, Neena Gupta, Jackie Shroff, Mahima Chaudhry, Tiku Talsania
Director: Sameer Vidwans
Writer: Karan Shrikant Sharma


FCG Member Reviewer Rohan Naahar
Rohan Naahar | Independent Film Critic
A Spotify Review

Wed, February 25 2026

Once again, we find ourselves watching a Kartik Aaryan movie and wondering why… We discuss Tu Meri Main Tera Main Tera Tu Meri’s pointless travel vlog first half, which unexpectedly transforms into a combination of Baghban and Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge. We also discuss the film’s awkward projection of seemingly progressive values, which happens to be filtered through a deeply regressive lens. We conclude by wondering if Croatia even knows what it has gotten itself into by inviting the Kartik Aaryans of the world to visit.

FCG Member Reviewer Sachin Chatte
Sachin Chatte | The Navhind Times Goa
What's luv got to do with it?

Sun, December 28 2025

Directed by Sameer Vidwans, the film Tu Meri Main Tera Main Tera Tu Meri is proof that a film and it’s title can be overwhelmingly long. The title itself gives us adequate warning and feels like an endurance test, and the film faithfully lives up to it. By the midpoint, which feels like an eternity, one realizes that only half of the title has been addressed.

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FCG Member Reviewer Nonika Singh
Nonika Singh | The Tribune
Lovely locales is all there is to fall for

Sat, December 27 2025

The film picks up some momentum and verve, an emotional arc as well, but only by the fag end

For some time, Dharma Productions has been wearing its progressive heart and beliefs on its sleeve. That’s all very well, what more do you want from the proponents of ‘rich lives matter’? Like the typical gloss and shine signature of its cinema, it can’t quite bid adieu to its glitzy USP. Any wonder then that the storyline spends the first half in picturesque Croatia. The ‘to-die-for’ locales of the European nation on the coast of the Adriatic Sea is where love blossoms between our two lovebirds.

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Image of scene from the film Kennedy
FCG Rating for the film Kennedy: 55/100
Kennedy

Crime, Thriller (Hindi)

An insomniac former cop, Kennedy has been presumed dead for years. Yet, in secret, he continues to serve a corrupt system while seeking redemption. Halfway between thriller and film noir, Kennedy chronicles a violent and bloody vendetta in the dark streets of Mumbai. At the rate of the murders, Kennedy's character reveals itself more and more and sinks into a spiral that seems to have no way out.

Cast: Rahul Bhat, Sunny Leone, Mohit Takalkar, Megha Burman, Haripriya Manish Lodhia, Shrikant Yadav, Abhilash Thapliyal, Jeniffer Piccinato, Benedict Garrett, Aamir Dalvi
Director: Anurag Kashyap


FCG Member Reviewer Akhil Arora
Akhil Arora | akhilarora.com
A Spotify Review

Wed, February 25 2026

It took three years for Anurag Kashyap’s Kennedy to secure a release after its Cannes premiere, and that, too, on the D-list tier streaming service ZEE5. We discuss the film’s baffling narrative, vague rumination about corruption and power, and long stretches of inaction that don’t feel authentic to Kashyap. We also spend way too much time discussing the ill-fitting costumes of Rahul Bhat and the underused Sunny Leone, and end with unverified rumours about the movie’s long-delayed release. Hint: It had something to do with a certain ‘Bade Papa’.

FCG Member Reviewer Sucharita Tyagi
Sucharita Tyagi | Independent Film Critic
Personal, realized, and forthright both in its exuberance, and despondency

Tue, February 24 2026

FCG Member Reviewer Anuj Kumar
Anuj Kumar | The Hindu
Rahul Bhat powers this haunting meditation on systemic rot and redemption

Sat, February 21 2026

Anurag Kashyap returns to his raw, uncompromising ways with a ticking-time-bomb of a film that rewards patience

Before the curtain rises on Anurag Kashyap’s latest noirish adventure, William Wordsworth’s famous words, “We poets in our youth begin in gladness; but thereof come in the end despondency and madness”, flash on the screen. This struggle between resolution and independence holds for both Kashyap and Kennedy.

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Image of scene from the film Assi
FCG Rating for the film Assi: 63/100
Assi

Crime, Drama, Thriller (Hindi)

An investigative courtroom drama based on the alarming statistic of nearly eighty sexual assault cases reported daily in India. In just one day. Every day.

Cast: Taapsee Pannu, Kani Kusruti, Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub, Manoj Pahwa, Kumud Mishra, Revathi, Naseeruddin Shah, Supriya Pathak, Rajendra Sethi, Satyajit Sharma
Director: Anubhav Sinha
Writer: Gaurav Solanki, Anubhav Sinha


FCG Member Reviewer Sucharita Tyagi
Sucharita Tyagi | Independent Film Critic
Heavy-Handed Cinema for Heavy Times

Tue, February 24 2026

FCG Member Reviewer Tatsam Mukherjee
Tatsam Mukherjee | The Wire
Designed to Speak the Language of Manipulation Instead of Nuance

Mon, February 23 2026

Assi is not Sinha’s finest hour as a director, but the lack of sophistication might be necessary to reach an audience that otherwise laps up mean-spirited propaganda.

At one point in Anubhav Sinha’s Assi, a father (Manoj Pahwa) and his son (Abhishant Rana) are devouring a plate of chhole bhature. The father says, “Your mother is an excellent cook, but the chhole bhature she makes is… okay. No shame in eating outside once in a while. You can get a plate like this for Rs 60, maybe Momos for Rs 90,” he says, going on to add – “but a man never brings these home.” Only towards the end, does a woman overhearing the conversation realise that the duo aren’t talking about her food. The son is shown to be an accomplice in a rape, a few scenes earlier. I can see why co-writers Sinha and Gaurav Solanki [the duo had also earlier written Article 15] might lean on the wryness of a scene like this to explain a perpetrator’s mindset. But the scene feels too satisfied with its oversimplified metaphors for deep-seated dishonesty and compartmentalisation that the (primarily) male, urban population is capable of.

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FCG Member Reviewer Sachin Chatte
Sachin Chatte | The Navhind Times Goa
No Safety in Numbers

Sun, February 22 2026

There is no gentle way to say this—Anubhav Sinha’s Assi hits you hard. It is, at times, an uneasy watch—and therefore, a very good film. To be clear, the unease does not come from graphic visuals; it comes from statistics read aloud by a lawyer, from stark statements that linger long after they are spoken. If merely listening to these details causes discomfort, one can only imagine the horrors endured by the victims. Sinha not only stabs us in the heart; he twists the knife—quietly, deliberately.

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Image of scene from the film Do Deewane Seher Mein
Do Deewane Seher Mein

Romance, Drama (Hindi)

Two socially awkward millennials in Mumbai find love while struggling with self-acceptance. As they battle insecurities and societal pressure, their journey takes them from city chaos to mountain serenity.

Cast: Siddhant Chaturvedi, Mrunal Thakur, Ila Arun, Joy Sengupta, Ayesha Raza Mishra, Viraj Ghelani, Sandeepa Dhar, Deepraj Rana, Mona Ambegaonkar, Naveen Kaushik
Director: Ravi Udyawar
Writer: Abhiruchi Chand


FCG Member Reviewer Anuj Kumar
Anuj Kumar | The Hindu
A reluctant nod to imperfect love

Sat, February 21 2026

Siddhant Chaturvedi and Mrunal Thakur fail to rise above flimsy conflicts in this plodding romantic drama, devoid of passion

When the trailer of Ravi Udaywar’s romantic drama Do Deewane Seher Mein surfaced online, one was hooked to the tune of Gulzar’s melancholic Do Deewane (Gharaonda), searching for home and sustenance all over again. The haunting voice of Bhupinder Singh and the melody in Runa Laila’s timbre continue to capture the dreams, hope, and loneliness that lovebirds face in big cities. However, it turns out that old gold is being refashioned to win over a new audience, but the carat is compromised in the process.

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FCG Member Reviewer Shubhra Gupta
Shubhra Gupta | The Indian Express
Siddhant Chaturvedi, Mrunal Thakur film just doesn’t have enough deewanapan

Fri, February 20 2026

Siddhant Chaturvedi, Mrunal Thakur film makes you wonder how how can you expect passion in a film where the censors have excised ridiculous numbers of words from the mouths of adults?

To judge by appearance is a bad thing. This single line premise is stretched out over two and a half hours, leading to a film where you are left counting the moments where two people spark. The only nice thing about Do Deewane Seher Mein– please note, not Shehar–is that for a change a Hindi film doesn’t make you feel as if Shashank (Sidhant Chaturvedi) and Roshni (Mrunal Thakur) could be brother and sister. There is attraction, and they do act upon it, bringing their faces close enough for their lips to touch. Small mercies.

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