• The music and background score befits the genre and overall, the film gives you a feel of a B-grade potboiler of the 1980s.

  • Overall, mounted with moderate production values the film is a mediocre fare worth a Sunday watch on television.

  • The film boasts of moderate production values. The background score by Rupert Fernandez is bright and chirpy. The songs; “Aache bachche rote nahin” and “Aye Zindagi” snuggly mesh into the narrative.
    Overall, the film is slight too flat and straight.

  • While the film boasts of decent production values, overall it fails to engross you.

  • Overall, this quirky film has its moments of brilliance which keeps you riveted.

  • Overall, to appreciate any good piece of art, one needs to ruminate to find a meaning in its composition. Despite not breaking any barriers, Mercury offers a lot to ruminate about, not in an organic manner but a forced one.

  • Overall, while the film is a cautionary tale about the dangers of biological manipulation, it offers nothing exceptional that one has not seen in earlier films of the same genre.

  • Overall, the film, artistically mounted with horror tropes, despite its fascinating concept which feels fiercely original, risky and undeniably frightening, feels like a contrived film, especially towards the end.

  • Baaghi 2 is a few notches better than its predecessor, which is saying a lot. And the only saving grace we could argue is that Ronnie joined the armed forces to vent the rebellion born out of his failed love story, which in the narrative is taken for granted.

  • At the end, the film does manage to keep you at the edge of your seat as you empathise with the plight of the victims.

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