Andhadhun — Limited

Spoiler territory ahead—though honestly, the film is so layered that spoilers don’t ruin it.

Akash gets a private booking at the house of a washed-up acting legend. Only, when he arrives, the legend is dead. His wife, Simi (Tabu), is cleaning up the mess. And Akash, sitting at the piano with a bullet-riddled body two feet away, has to decide: Do I keep playing blind?

It’s funny, it’s gory, it’s suspenseful, and it’s one of the few films that genuinely improves on repeat viewings. You’ll notice the tiny details—the dropped whisky glasses, the shifting expressions, the lies hidden in plain sight. Andhadhun

Tap.

He wasn’t blind. He was never blind. Or is he just that good at faking it? Spoiler territory ahead—though honestly, the film is so

Let’s get one thing straight: you are not smart enough to solve Andhadhun on the first watch. Neither was I. Neither was the guy who paused it 47 times to take notes.

He does. And the knife (literally) twists from there. 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. His wife, Simi (Tabu), is cleaning up the mess

As Akash walks away, he smoothly taps away a tin can lying in his path with his cane.