Blackmail (2018)
When Dev finds about his wife's affair, he starts blackmailing her and her lover but the blackmail game backfires on him.
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A ,ovie which breaks every mold.. Superb writing, amazing comic timings, great cast, well suited roles and stellar performances... MUST MUST Watch.. One of the best recent comedies... in league with Vicky Donor sans the romance and the social msg...
Supposed to be a dark comedy with a promising plot but falls flat after sometime in the beginning itself.it is neither funny nor tragic. Full of loop holes . Who blackmails in 2018 with a SIM card in his name? Total waste of time.
Cinematography was decent, music felt out of place because the parts that I felt to be serious was supposed to be making me feel "fun".Movie tried and failed at being a dark comedy for the story and took a bad comical fall intentionally. It sets up serious problems/consequences like a drama/psychological/crime movie and resolves it like a cheap cartoon.
This was unexpected. I went in the hall with low expectations, having literally no idea of what the film was going to be about. I had no idea of what I was in for. Boy, did I enjoy every bit of the roller-coaster ride! On the surface, it looks to be simple - a man finds his wife is cheating on him, he plans to blackmail on his wife's boyfriend to pay off his bills. That's where it gets complicated. What follows is an impressive accounts lesson, money changing hands as frequently as nymphomaniacs changing clothes, and shades of grey revealed in every character. Friendship, love, jobs, loyalty - everything bows their head to the almighty rupee (or dollar, depending on where you are from). The music is impressive. The soundtrack is among Amit Trivedi's top five, easily. The acting is, for lack of a better word, amazing. Irrfan Khan steals the show. Smaller actors could have easily collapsed under the weight that the film demanded from the lead role, but boy, he does not disappoint. Other actors (Arunoday Singh, Kirti Kulhari, Divya Dutta, Omi Vaidya, et al.) also make handle their roles with grace, but your eyes will never stray from Irrfan. One word of caution, though - this is full of dark humor, not dark comedy - don't go into the film expecting laughs and giggles.