Andhadhun Reviews and Ratings
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Tabu is marvelous, Sriram Raghavan finally having created a fitting role for this uber-talented actress, whom we really should be seeing much more of. Ayushmann Khurrana is wonderful, too, sinking into his part.
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Sriram Raghvan’s new thriller pulls off great tricks in plain sight. It will surprise you when you least expect it to.
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Sriram Raghavan’s thriller is about a blind pianist (Ayushmann Khurrana) who gets accidentally embroiled in a murder
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AndhaDhun is a slow burner, the more you invest yourself in it, the more you enjoy it. Also, never treat a piano just as another instrument. You never know, it might be plotting against you.
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Sriram Raghavan has set his focus on making the usually serious murder mystery a gripping yet entertaining one.
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Andhadhun is completely aware of its intelligence and quick wits mercilessly testing our gullibility while Raghavan leads us to its staggering finish with the finesse of a Mikado champion.
It’s stunning, comic, grisly, absurd, intense, cold, crazy and must-watch.
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Watch Andhadhun with your ears, eyes and minds open. You will come away with your senses heightened.
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Open to various interpretations and unpredictable from beginning to end, AndhaDhun is an engaging thriller that keeps you on your toes and leaves you guessing all the way.
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If you have grown up reading mystery/crime novels, don’t miss AndhaDhun. You will simply love it.
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Andhadun, starring Ayushmann Khurrana, Radhika Apte and Tabu is a riveting and twisted classic thriller…
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Before I say anything more, I suggest you watch ‘Andhadhun’ and then we can match our notes. If you watched Sriram Raghavan’s earlier works (‘Ek Hasina Thi’ (2004), ‘Badlapur’ (2015) among others), you know this one too isn’t going to be a predictable tale. Yet again, Raghavan has come up with something dark and delicious.
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If you plan to watch Andhadhun, make sure you arrive early so that you do not miss the prologue or the old-fashioned credits, along with the bizarre statement accompanying them on screen, plus the tribute to Vividh Bharti’s Chhaya Geet and Doordarshan’s Chitrahaar. It all counts, as does every minute, second and millisecond of the unpredictable, crazy ride that follows.
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The camera work and editing are flawless. The first scene where the hunter is chasing the hare in a cabbage field is intelligently integrated into the narrative and that is when the brilliance of the Director and his team, hits you.
Overall, Andhadhun is a film worth your ticket price.
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But for those who love crime novelists James Hardley Chase or David Fincher’s films, then you are likely to savour Andhadhun, a perfect crime story with a killer plot.