The introduction of the eccentric supporting cast—played brilliantly by Ashwini Kalsekar and Zakir Hussain—elevates the film to a fever pitch. The humor is macabre; we laugh at misfortunes, we chuckle at the absurdity of a blind man being kidnapped, and we cringe at the moral bankruptcy of every character involved. There are no "good guys" in the second half of Andhadhun , only varying shades of gray.
We need to talk about Simi. Tabu doesn’t just play a villain; she plays a force of nature. She is elegant, terrifying, unpredictable, and heartbreakingly lonely all at once. Watching her switch from a grieving widow to a cold-blooded schemer to a sobbing mess is like watching a cat play with a mouse—except the cat also has a gun and a severed sense of morality. Andhadhun
Just when you think the plot is a simple "blind man vs. murderer," Raghavan throws in a detour involving a corrupt doctor, a lottery ticket, and a black-market organ racket. The middle act is pure, adrenaline-fueled chaos. Akash gets actually blinded, gets chased, gets kidnapped, and teams up with a murderous doctor to take down Simi. We need to talk about Simi
The film becomes a brutal, hilarious, and deeply cynical game of shifting alliances. You don’t know who to trust because every character has the moral compass of a roulette wheel. Watching her switch from a grieving widow to