Andhadhun Review //free\\
Andhadhun ends with a time jump of two years. We see Akash in Europe, performing a concert. He is no longer wearing glasses. He walks with confidence. He sees Simi on the street—now wearing an expensive rabbit’s foot keychain (a callback to a long-debated plot point about a dead rabbit). He taps his white cane in her direction, and as she walks away, he strikes it aside and walks forward without it.
One of Indian cinema’s greatest structural shifts occurs when the protagonist's fake blindness becomes a terrifying reality in the second half. The Chaos: andhadhun review
This is where the film sheds its skin and becomes something truly anarchic. The second half introduces a rogue’s gallery of grotesques: a corrupt doctor who runs an organ harvesting racket (Zakir Hussain), a gossipy landlady, a hapless lottery ticket seller, and a police inspector (played with terrifying glee by Radhika Apte) who has more guns than morals. Andhadhun ends with a time jump of two years
As the story unfolds, Andhadhun's life is turned upside down, and he's forced to navigate a complex and sinister plot. The movie expertly weaves together multiple storylines, keeping the audience on the edge of their seats as they try to piece together the clues. He walks with confidence