
The director tries to keep you on your toes throughout. The suspects include a suspended police officer, Ibrahim (Milind Gunaji), who was the last person who saw the girl, a divorcee (Shilpa Shukla), who is too much bothered about society’s alienation of her; and even the girl’s parents, when it’s learnt she’d been adopted. While the police chief (Dalip Tahil) is more or less in his favour, Vikram finds himself at loggerheads with another HIT officer (Jatin Goswami). Several red herrings later, he chances upon the reason behind the disappearance of both the girls. By this time, the proceedings have become so convoluted that the viewer has lost most of his interest.
The film is lopsided, to say the least. While it does apprise us about the inner workings of a police investigation, it’s filled with characters that are so one-dimensional that they might as well be mannequins. There’s no justification for the friction between Vikram and his colleague. We have no idea why Shilpa Shukla’s character behaved the way she did, and the reason behind another colleague’s behaviour too boggles the mind. Sanya Malhotra is absent for most of the film. They could have at least shown her predicament from her point of view, but we don’t get that at all.
Sanya Malhotra shines like a ray of sunshine in this otherwise bleak film. She shares a palpable chemistry with Rajkummar Rao, and we wish there was more of her to see in the film. It’s all set for a sequel, so hopefully we’ll see her in a better role in the next film. Rajkummar Rao has the habit of rising above the constraints of the script, and he does it again in this film. He’s a method actor and brings all his craft into play here, playing a grief-stricken, angst-filled cop with every ounce of creativity in his possession. He’s the best thing about the film and keeps you invested in the project through sheer dint of effort.
from filmfares
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