After Phobia, this is way below par movie from Pavan Kirpalani, works neither as whodunnit nor as a drama.


Directed by: Pavan Kirpalani

"Har woh cheez jisne mujhe daraaya hai, wahin se mujhe apne saare sawaalo ke jawaab milenge.

Gaslight: Meesha (Sara Ali Khan) looks out the car window, while her stepmother Rukmini (Chitrangda Singh) engages in a conversation


Spoilers ahead...


Plot of Gaslight: Sara Ali Khan Tries to Solve the Mystery of Her Missing Father

Meesha (Sara Ali Khan) returns to her royal family estate for the first time since childhood to visit her father, with whom she hasn't spoken in more than a decade. She is welcomed at the palace by her stepmother Rukmini (Chitrangda Singh). Soon, she learns that her father isn't home and has gone for some important work. The rest of the story deals with how Meesha feels something is off and that her father (whom she calls Daata) should have been home, knowing she was coming to meet him after such a long gap.

A Crime Mystery with Clichéd Twists

These days, most mystery suspense films have two twists. Once the first twist is revealed, we suddenly learn there's a bigger one that was kept hidden. Now, I am not against this, but for that second big twist to work, I feel the first one has to be good enough too; otherwise, it just gives a feeling of the makers having no confidence, so they play it safe.

In "Gaslight," the same problem occurs. It would hardly take you 15-20 minutes max to predict that first twist, largely because the writing team didn't do enough work on the character of Kapil (Vikrant Massey), the estate manager who all the time gives you the feeling that he isn't what he is showing. Also, it's one of the weakest performances of Vikrant Massey as it lacked freshness and felt seen before, making you feel he's getting typecast.

The second twist is good but questionable too because you have to backtrack and understand why Meesha behaves like she does in some of the scenes. To be honest, I don't have the patience to give the movie another chance for that.

Initial Horror Setup Works in Gaslight

I did enjoy the initial horror setup; for a while, I was hoping that there was actually either some ghost at work or some black magic in play. Although the dark night settings felt way too dark at times, making it tough to see what's happening, something I felt while watching the trailer too. The entire blind woman act was silly, even if later the real intention is shown, it was so hammy that any smart person wouldn't buy it.

Performance-wise, everyone falters mostly because the writing is average. Chitrangda Singh is likable for the most part, while Sara Ali Khan felt okay-ish and irritating at places. Rahul Dev feels wasted; maybe the idea was that less of him would mean he is the real suspect, but that still didn't work out. I haven't seen him much in the past few years, so it was still good to see him in the limited screentime.

Verdict on Gaslight

Overall, I was expecting more than just an average movie from Pavan Kirpalani, as he has done some good work in the past, especially Phobia, but Gaslight neither works as a whodunnit nor as a drama.

Rating: 4/10

Also, Check out Movie Analysis of Double XL