31 reviews
Impressively and decently made horror film!
Ram Gopal Varma has always been a favourite, and Bhoot is his most intense attempt at horror. I was previously blown away by his little tiny piece "Kaun?", and expected to see something intriguing this time as well. I was not disappointed. The film is interesting and captivating and it flows brilliantly. What I particularly appreciated about it is the lack of simplification, which sets it aside from all the mindless horror films which have no purpose or reason, and you will discover it towards the end. However, I would still not call Bhoot a horror film - because it wasn't really scary. I think it is best described as a very effective and chilling suspense thriller. Cinematography, background score, editing are aspects which contribute to it very well. Urmila Matondkar plays Swati, a ghost-possessed woman whose husband does not know what to do to save her. Matondkar is indescribably brilliant - this is one of the most difficult roles to play and somehow Matondkar seems to do it with total ease and unsettling intensity. This is an exceptional impulsive performance. Ajay Devgan is very believable as the helpless Vishal who loves his life but is also quite terrified of her. Devgan displays both fear, worry, love and concern convincingly. The film has many appearances by different famous actors, most of whom are portrayed as somewhat emotionally disturbed. Seema Biswas is wonderful as the strange, shady and very disturbing housemaid. Rekha is also fantastic as the mysterious exorcist. Other cast members, including Nana Patekar, Victor Banerjee and Tanuja, are great, while Fardeen Khan is unfortunately not up to the mark. Do watch Bhoot. Regardless of how scared you may or may not be, it is an entertaining picture.
- Peter_Young
- Aug 27, 2009
- Permalink
All in all, not a bad movie
- ijzeren_jan
- Aug 13, 2009
- Permalink
A honest and sincere attempt to frighten.
- Hysteria28
- May 12, 2010
- Permalink
A "spirited" take on the horror genre!
Prior to `Bhoot', I had seen only 1 ½ Ram Gopal Varma films: years ago, I'd enjoyed watching `Rangeela', a frothy confection with a delightful Aamir Khan and a newly voluptuous Urmila Matondkar (I say `newly' because until then, I only knew of Urmila as the bubbly child actor from the memorable `Masoom'); the ½ film was `Jungle', a movie so gratuitously and graphically violent that I'd walked out of the movie theatre. I have no idea if it was any good. Other than that, all I know about Ram Gopal Varma is that he has a predilection for single-word titles for the movies he directs: `Daud', `Khauff', `Satya', and so on.
Not being a huge fan of horror films, and still smarting from my `Jungle' experience, I began watching `Bhoot' with some trepidation. `Bhoot' translates to either `ghost' or `spirit', so right away, one knows the subject matter of the film. The title and its succinctness act as a caveat to the faint of heart.
The opening scene has an irritable young man, Vishal, searching, rather unsuccessfully, for rental accommodations in the company of an agent. The broker has shown him several less than satisfactory apartments, and the young man's patience is wearing thin. He points to a towering high-rise building nearby and says, `That looks like a fine building! Do you have an apartment available there?' We pick up on the broker's nervousness as he responds, `Actually, yes. But you wouldn't want it.' Vishal insists on seeing the twelfth-floor apartment, which turns out to be huge, even palatial by Mumbai (Bombay) standards, and he cannot understand why the place is still unoccupied. Such an apartment would be snapped up in moments. The broker hesitantly tells him that the previous occupant of the apartment had fallen-or jumped-to her death from the balcony. The pragmatic Vishal retorts that practically all dwellings must have had someone die in them at one time or another, and proceeds to finalize the rental deal. He then moves in with his perky young wife, Swati. With their furniture and belongings, the empty, echoing apartment gets transformed into a comfortable home.
Vishal is a stockbroker, and Swati, a stay-at-home housewife. We gather that they have not been married long; they are playful and romantic, still in the honeymoon phase of marriage. They inherit the previous occupant's maid, so apart from some grocery shopping, there isn't much for Swati to do while she waits for Vishal to return home from work. She sits in front of the TV and channel-surfs distractedly to pass the time.
One such day, the belligerent watchman of the building sneaks into the apartment without knocking and startles her. Swati and Vishal complain to the chairman of the building council, who also happens to be their next-door neighbor. Decrying the lack of good help, the neighbor says there's nothing he can do. As the watchman is a witness in the police investigation of the previous occupant's death, they cannot very well get rid of him. This disclosure comes as a complete surprise to Swati, as Vishal has withheld from her the details of the circumstances in which he came by their new apartment.
With this new knowledge, softhearted Swati, a gamine little thing with a waifish hairdo, starts brooding over the possible circumstances of the young woman's tragic death. Her innate sympathy makes her receptive, a sort of emotional lightning rod, to the unhappiness around her, which triggers off a number of rather alarming paranormal phenomena. At first, she only senses the presence of the woman; then, she catches a fleeting reflection of her in a mirror, and then, the woman starts invading her dreams and even her daytime reveries. With time on her hands and due to her susceptibility, she becomes the ideal receptor for the occult manifestations.
Vishal, at first, is dismissive of his wife's paranoia, her `ghost fixation', and teases her mercilessly. But, as their lives become increasingly hellish and his wife changes to the point of being unrecognizable, he seeks outside help.
It would be unfair to reveal any more, except to say that Ram Gopal Varma has a made a first-rate thriller. I read somewhere that the inspiration for this film was one of Varma's own films; he had watched it again recently and had cringed at the inadequacy of his early effort. `Bhoot', a sort of remake of that earlier film, is his way of getting it right this time, and boy, does he get it right! There is none of the `Jungle' gore; the suspense and the scares are psychological and the result is terrifying. He alternates between a steadicam and a hand-held camera in several scenes to bring an urgency and claustrophobic feel to the apartment. Even in broad daylight, there is a sickly blue cast to the surroundings, which foreshadows what is to come. The truly scary thing is that Varma has managed to take prime Mumbai real estate and turn it into something so sinister, you wouldn't want it for free! The camera follows his protagonists down corridors, hallways, and stairs, and your heart lurches as you worry about them. My only grouse was the silly haunted-house soundtrack, with its creaks, groans, and howls, which starts the movie off. Silence would have been far scarier; Varma catches on soon enough, for the background score gets muted from then on. In fact, the first look we get of the spirit is done in such masterfully throwaway fashion, that we almost wonder if we imagined seeing the apparition. The tension builds insidiously and in barely perceptible increments, until, like its unlucky inhabitants, all we want to do is run screaming from the apartment.
Urmila Matondkar is simply astounding as Swati. With only the barest traces of makeup on her face, she effectively conveys the grisly changes in her character through body language and voice. Her pixie look for this film is inspired: with her short, tousled hair and pert little nose, she personifies `adorable' and `harmless'. What she does with that fragile look is to her credit as an actor. Ajay Devgan is excellent, too, as her tortured husband, driven to his wits' end by the events in their once-happy life together. The supporting players are fine: I have not seen a film in years that has used Rekha's hypnotic voice and eyes to such potent effect. Tanuja does good work in a miniscule role, as does Victor Banerjee, in the role of the psychiatrist called in to treat Swati even as his own daughter lies dying. Nana Patekar, as the investigating police officer, and Seema Biswas, as the maid, enhance the spookiness quotient. Visual effects in Indian films are becoming slicker, and this film benefits from the advances in technology. The tight editing and inventive camera work deserve praise, as well.
Science and the rational world collide with the inexplicable and occult in `Bhoot' in a credible, riveting manner. Ram Gopal Varma can feel proud of his cinematic achievement, and you, dear viewer, had better look over your shoulder.
Not being a huge fan of horror films, and still smarting from my `Jungle' experience, I began watching `Bhoot' with some trepidation. `Bhoot' translates to either `ghost' or `spirit', so right away, one knows the subject matter of the film. The title and its succinctness act as a caveat to the faint of heart.
The opening scene has an irritable young man, Vishal, searching, rather unsuccessfully, for rental accommodations in the company of an agent. The broker has shown him several less than satisfactory apartments, and the young man's patience is wearing thin. He points to a towering high-rise building nearby and says, `That looks like a fine building! Do you have an apartment available there?' We pick up on the broker's nervousness as he responds, `Actually, yes. But you wouldn't want it.' Vishal insists on seeing the twelfth-floor apartment, which turns out to be huge, even palatial by Mumbai (Bombay) standards, and he cannot understand why the place is still unoccupied. Such an apartment would be snapped up in moments. The broker hesitantly tells him that the previous occupant of the apartment had fallen-or jumped-to her death from the balcony. The pragmatic Vishal retorts that practically all dwellings must have had someone die in them at one time or another, and proceeds to finalize the rental deal. He then moves in with his perky young wife, Swati. With their furniture and belongings, the empty, echoing apartment gets transformed into a comfortable home.
Vishal is a stockbroker, and Swati, a stay-at-home housewife. We gather that they have not been married long; they are playful and romantic, still in the honeymoon phase of marriage. They inherit the previous occupant's maid, so apart from some grocery shopping, there isn't much for Swati to do while she waits for Vishal to return home from work. She sits in front of the TV and channel-surfs distractedly to pass the time.
One such day, the belligerent watchman of the building sneaks into the apartment without knocking and startles her. Swati and Vishal complain to the chairman of the building council, who also happens to be their next-door neighbor. Decrying the lack of good help, the neighbor says there's nothing he can do. As the watchman is a witness in the police investigation of the previous occupant's death, they cannot very well get rid of him. This disclosure comes as a complete surprise to Swati, as Vishal has withheld from her the details of the circumstances in which he came by their new apartment.
With this new knowledge, softhearted Swati, a gamine little thing with a waifish hairdo, starts brooding over the possible circumstances of the young woman's tragic death. Her innate sympathy makes her receptive, a sort of emotional lightning rod, to the unhappiness around her, which triggers off a number of rather alarming paranormal phenomena. At first, she only senses the presence of the woman; then, she catches a fleeting reflection of her in a mirror, and then, the woman starts invading her dreams and even her daytime reveries. With time on her hands and due to her susceptibility, she becomes the ideal receptor for the occult manifestations.
Vishal, at first, is dismissive of his wife's paranoia, her `ghost fixation', and teases her mercilessly. But, as their lives become increasingly hellish and his wife changes to the point of being unrecognizable, he seeks outside help.
It would be unfair to reveal any more, except to say that Ram Gopal Varma has a made a first-rate thriller. I read somewhere that the inspiration for this film was one of Varma's own films; he had watched it again recently and had cringed at the inadequacy of his early effort. `Bhoot', a sort of remake of that earlier film, is his way of getting it right this time, and boy, does he get it right! There is none of the `Jungle' gore; the suspense and the scares are psychological and the result is terrifying. He alternates between a steadicam and a hand-held camera in several scenes to bring an urgency and claustrophobic feel to the apartment. Even in broad daylight, there is a sickly blue cast to the surroundings, which foreshadows what is to come. The truly scary thing is that Varma has managed to take prime Mumbai real estate and turn it into something so sinister, you wouldn't want it for free! The camera follows his protagonists down corridors, hallways, and stairs, and your heart lurches as you worry about them. My only grouse was the silly haunted-house soundtrack, with its creaks, groans, and howls, which starts the movie off. Silence would have been far scarier; Varma catches on soon enough, for the background score gets muted from then on. In fact, the first look we get of the spirit is done in such masterfully throwaway fashion, that we almost wonder if we imagined seeing the apparition. The tension builds insidiously and in barely perceptible increments, until, like its unlucky inhabitants, all we want to do is run screaming from the apartment.
Urmila Matondkar is simply astounding as Swati. With only the barest traces of makeup on her face, she effectively conveys the grisly changes in her character through body language and voice. Her pixie look for this film is inspired: with her short, tousled hair and pert little nose, she personifies `adorable' and `harmless'. What she does with that fragile look is to her credit as an actor. Ajay Devgan is excellent, too, as her tortured husband, driven to his wits' end by the events in their once-happy life together. The supporting players are fine: I have not seen a film in years that has used Rekha's hypnotic voice and eyes to such potent effect. Tanuja does good work in a miniscule role, as does Victor Banerjee, in the role of the psychiatrist called in to treat Swati even as his own daughter lies dying. Nana Patekar, as the investigating police officer, and Seema Biswas, as the maid, enhance the spookiness quotient. Visual effects in Indian films are becoming slicker, and this film benefits from the advances in technology. The tight editing and inventive camera work deserve praise, as well.
Science and the rational world collide with the inexplicable and occult in `Bhoot' in a credible, riveting manner. Ram Gopal Varma can feel proud of his cinematic achievement, and you, dear viewer, had better look over your shoulder.
Bhoot-Hindi for:Ghost.
- morrison-dylan-fan
- Jun 8, 2014
- Permalink
ok movie...not scary
I have to give credit to Ram Gopal Verma for trying out different types of movies. This time with a horror movie he does well but still there are many flaws in the movie and a lot could have been done to make this movie good and above all scary... That was one thing that was missing. It was missing the edge of the seat moment!!!. Urmila was ok and so was Ajay. But i really think Rekha was wasted in such a small role. I am still awaiting an Indian Horror movie that will really scare me!!! Maybe Ram Gopal Verma's next 'Darna Mana Hai' will do it!
Bhooth without supernatural ailments
This movie is like a movie based on horror genre but because censor board had cut their gory, killer, body chilling scenes that bones straight out of graveyard, this story comes out without supernatural scenes. Bhooth who does not have supernatural ailments. Lol. First half of the movie showed only horror scenes as hallucinations, daydreams and nightmares. Like seriously nothing serious. And other half was science vs religion aspect on supernatural beliefs and entities but this one was not just science vs religion thing but it also had science vs religion vs law and order. A murder case was also to be solved by Mumbai police officer, Liaqaut Qureshi, played by Nana Patekar. This made the movie more mystery type rather than serious horror. Anyway good work by Nana 👍🏼, he cannot make you bore in any of his movies.
- sameerkhan666
- Mar 18, 2023
- Permalink
It's creepy alright!
This movie definitely has a very creepy setting. What works on you is that its not a haunted mansion setting, but a local apartment in Mumbai, one which you could be renting right now. Add some creepy looking doll and eerie music, you're most likely going to grab the next person sitting next to you and cry to be released. But! this intense thriller, horror remains only in the first half of the movie. The second half, although I'm not going to make any specific remarks, ( want you to find out for yourself) tries to remake some of the earlier Hollywood movies and it sort of takes your attention off of the whole movie. That's when the movie's originality begins to slide and fail.
They should have done something different, but most horror genres have this habit of screwing up some portion of the movie. But let me warn you, this movie is certainly NOT for kids. If you cannot withstand watching supernatural horror, please don't watch this one, it might really grip you tight for a few weeks, or even months maybe!
They should have done something different, but most horror genres have this habit of screwing up some portion of the movie. But let me warn you, this movie is certainly NOT for kids. If you cannot withstand watching supernatural horror, please don't watch this one, it might really grip you tight for a few weeks, or even months maybe!
- sumana-m21
- Apr 10, 2009
- Permalink
This film is a copy of The Exorcist
This movie is a rip-off of The Exorcist, but this version happens to be in Hindi. Even the sound design and production quality is completely lifted from the former. I'll admit, it's different from your usual Bollywood fodder, but when you think about it, what's new here? Gimme a hollow hindi musical instead... at least they're more honest about the sum of their parts.
- Monster-17
- Oct 9, 2003
- Permalink
great horror flick after a long time
hail Ram gopal verma.the true master of horror genre movies in recent times. i saw this movie in Dubai in an multiplex. the background score is an character in itself which propels the movie to greater heights.some may find this remark awry but i feel that the background score is the spinal cord for a horror movie.an ensemble of great acting talents of the likes of Nana,Rekha,Tanuja,Ajay & finally Urmila.lets not talk about Fardeen.great editing,cinematography add to the haunting mood of the film.overall an classic product from RGV's factory.don't miss it.greatly recommended but certainly not for the faint hearted.watch it in an multiplex and then u will realize what i meant.
- gladsonkunder26-1
- Apr 18, 2007
- Permalink
Not as expected
The reviews read on different raised my expectations. But, after watching the movie, I could not find it that promising. Infact, the second half of the movie was quite hopeless. The script is weak. Though, the direction is okay and Urmila is great, the movie doesn't delivers upto. In fact, I would say Raat and Kaun were far ahead of this movie. In my view, it can be avoided!
- vaibhavkuchhal
- Jun 4, 2003
- Permalink
One of the most popular BOLLYWOOD horror films ever made
Not being a huge fan of horror films, and still smarting from my 'Jungle' experience, I began watching 'Bhoot' with some trepidation. 'Bhoot' translates to either 'ghost' or 'spirit', so right away, one knows the subject matter of the film. The title and its succinctness act as a caveat to the faint of heart.
The opening scene has an irritable young man, Vishal, searching, rather unsuccessfully, for rental accommodations in the company of an agent. The broker has shown him several less than satisfactory apartments, and the young man's patience is wearing thin. He points to a towering high- rise building nearby and says, 'That looks like a fine building! Do you have an apartment available there?' We pick up on the broker's nervousness as he responds, 'Actually, yes. But you wouldn't want it.' Vishal insists on seeing the twelfth-floor apartment, which turns out to be huge, even palatial by Mumbai (Bombay) standards, and he cannot understand why the place is still unoccupied. Such an apartment would be snapped up in moments. The broker hesitantly tells him that the previous occupant of the apartment had fallen-or jumped-to her death from the balcony. The pragmatic Vishal retorts that practically all dwellings must have had someone die in them at one time or another, and proceeds to finalize the rental deal. He then moves in with his perky young wife, Swati. With their furniture and belongings, the empty, echoing apartment gets transformed into a comfortable home.
Vishal is a stockbroker, and Swati, a stay-at-home housewife. We gather that they have not been married long; they are playful and romantic, still in the honeymoon phase of marriage. They inherit the previous occupant's maid, so apart from some grocery shopping, there isn't much for Swati to do while she waits for Vishal to return home from work. She sits in front of the TV and channel-surfs distractedly to pass the time.
One such day, the belligerent watchman of the building sneaks into the apartment without knocking and startles her. Swati and Vishal complain to the chairman of the building council, who also happens to be their next-door neighbor. Decrying the lack of good help, the neighbor says there's nothing he can do. As the watchman is a witness in the police investigation of the previous occupant's death, they cannot very well get rid of him. This disclosure comes as a complete surprise to Swati, as Vishal has withheld from her the details of the circumstances in which he came by their new apartment.
The opening scene has an irritable young man, Vishal, searching, rather unsuccessfully, for rental accommodations in the company of an agent. The broker has shown him several less than satisfactory apartments, and the young man's patience is wearing thin. He points to a towering high- rise building nearby and says, 'That looks like a fine building! Do you have an apartment available there?' We pick up on the broker's nervousness as he responds, 'Actually, yes. But you wouldn't want it.' Vishal insists on seeing the twelfth-floor apartment, which turns out to be huge, even palatial by Mumbai (Bombay) standards, and he cannot understand why the place is still unoccupied. Such an apartment would be snapped up in moments. The broker hesitantly tells him that the previous occupant of the apartment had fallen-or jumped-to her death from the balcony. The pragmatic Vishal retorts that practically all dwellings must have had someone die in them at one time or another, and proceeds to finalize the rental deal. He then moves in with his perky young wife, Swati. With their furniture and belongings, the empty, echoing apartment gets transformed into a comfortable home.
Vishal is a stockbroker, and Swati, a stay-at-home housewife. We gather that they have not been married long; they are playful and romantic, still in the honeymoon phase of marriage. They inherit the previous occupant's maid, so apart from some grocery shopping, there isn't much for Swati to do while she waits for Vishal to return home from work. She sits in front of the TV and channel-surfs distractedly to pass the time.
One such day, the belligerent watchman of the building sneaks into the apartment without knocking and startles her. Swati and Vishal complain to the chairman of the building council, who also happens to be their next-door neighbor. Decrying the lack of good help, the neighbor says there's nothing he can do. As the watchman is a witness in the police investigation of the previous occupant's death, they cannot very well get rid of him. This disclosure comes as a complete surprise to Swati, as Vishal has withheld from her the details of the circumstances in which he came by their new apartment.
- nikhilfilmcritic
- Jul 18, 2011
- Permalink
Scary one
I went to see this movie expecting to find another dumb "chaitan" story. But found that this one is actually pretty darn good, even without qualifying it as a Hindi horror film.
Hindi horror films are awful. I am yet to see one that is really scary, and most of the time, when the *scary* part comes, my friends and I burst out in laughter. The make up leaves much to be desired and the story is always the same.
The story part is pretty much the same here too. This is not exactly a never-seen-before sort of storyline. However, other things make up for it. The movie completely belongs to the actors and the technicians, mainly the sound editor and the cinematographer. They have done away with grotesque make up and stuck to minimalistic approach, which is actually scarier.
The actors are brilliant. The have not given in to the urge that many Bollywood stars have, of going into the rhetoric by making loooong speeches and show extreme expressions. All the parts, except Urmila's and Rekha's have been portrayed very subtly. Urmila is pretty good, Ajay Devgan is very believable. Tanuja gives an excellent understated performance. Rekha is truly amazing. She manages to creep you out even more than the ghost in some scenes.
The one complaint I have, is that the movie loses some of its fear factor after the intermission. It just isn't that scary anymore. Also, there isn't any particular twist. However, there is one part which could have been the twist, but was downplayed. But on the whole, I'd definitely recommend it to anyone who likes a good scare. The movie is not for people who see the same for stories.
Overall - 8 / 10
Hindi horror films are awful. I am yet to see one that is really scary, and most of the time, when the *scary* part comes, my friends and I burst out in laughter. The make up leaves much to be desired and the story is always the same.
The story part is pretty much the same here too. This is not exactly a never-seen-before sort of storyline. However, other things make up for it. The movie completely belongs to the actors and the technicians, mainly the sound editor and the cinematographer. They have done away with grotesque make up and stuck to minimalistic approach, which is actually scarier.
The actors are brilliant. The have not given in to the urge that many Bollywood stars have, of going into the rhetoric by making loooong speeches and show extreme expressions. All the parts, except Urmila's and Rekha's have been portrayed very subtly. Urmila is pretty good, Ajay Devgan is very believable. Tanuja gives an excellent understated performance. Rekha is truly amazing. She manages to creep you out even more than the ghost in some scenes.
The one complaint I have, is that the movie loses some of its fear factor after the intermission. It just isn't that scary anymore. Also, there isn't any particular twist. However, there is one part which could have been the twist, but was downplayed. But on the whole, I'd definitely recommend it to anyone who likes a good scare. The movie is not for people who see the same for stories.
Overall - 8 / 10
Waste of time
I found this movie totally boring. The first half was OK. But the second.........was not quite done well.
If you expect some thing like The Others, Usual Suspects or Primal Fear, you will be very much disappointed.
Rating : A flat 4/10
If you expect some thing like The Others, Usual Suspects or Primal Fear, you will be very much disappointed.
Rating : A flat 4/10
Ok, I was scared.
Which about sums it up. For all the talk of songless-ness and being different and reinventing the genre (if remaking it in the standard Hollywood mode can be called reinvention; perhaps 'rescuing it from the Ramseys and the white-sari-clad woman with a blood-streaked face' is more appropriate) - all of which were true - what mattered in the end was whether this film could sustain the tension and make you empathise with the characters. And it did. The background score is really effective; camerawork is creative; the leads act flawlessly; there's a liberal sprinkling of red herrings, the characters are believable, and we're spared the quasi-religious mumbo-jumbo that mars so many films in this genre. While making a horror film is inherently a derivative process, Bhoot manages to avoid seeming cliched, both by the standards of Hindi filmdom (okay, that's not hard - the absence of either a dak bangla or a kabristan, as well as the aforementioned white sari, pretty much ensures that) as well as, to a lesser extent, Hollywood (which it is closer to in 'spirit'). Not by any means a pathbreaking film, but a very well-made one nonetheless. Excellent! Go watch it!
Cheaply made!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Mmmmmmmmmm...I have nothing to say. Everything about this movie is crap. First when I was about to put the disk into the player, I was excited. What could it have? Would it be scary? Soon I set my butt on the couch and launched myself in a vortex of stupidity, nonsense, boringness, and cheapness. The scare scenes are stupid, but the sound is surprisingly clear. But the visual display of the movie is like that of the early 80's. I mean there are tiny granule-like specks. It is like tiny ants crawling all over the T.V. screen. I was really disappointed at this movie. I shall warn you...if you want to save money. Ask those who have watched the movie you like so that there will be no hard feelings in the next minute of your life.
- apocalypse_66613
- Sep 11, 2005
- Permalink
A great thriller/horror flick from bollywood in a long long while
The movie greatly benefits from excellent direction and the pacing is great. One is always on tenterhooks and many a times the viewer gasps or mayhaps even lets out a small scream.
After a long wait, the Indian horror movie segment has come out with a real gem of a movie. Gone are the plastic rubberised masks of yesteryears and this movie plays on the psyche of the people. Fear is generated not through visual aids and props but rather through ideas and the thought processes of people.
All in all an excellent offering.
After a long wait, the Indian horror movie segment has come out with a real gem of a movie. Gone are the plastic rubberised masks of yesteryears and this movie plays on the psyche of the people. Fear is generated not through visual aids and props but rather through ideas and the thought processes of people.
All in all an excellent offering.
- aditya_trehan
- Jul 27, 2003
- Permalink
Back with a vengeance to haunt you....
When "Raatri" ("Raat" in Hindi, 1992) bombed at box-office I am sure Mr. Varma uttered "Yaad rakhunga, tujhe yaad rakhunga!". Exactly a decade later he changes a few components of the original, re-brands and sells it under the packaging of "Bhoot", and guess what it works. RGV must have smiled and thought to himself "Revenge is a dish, best served cold".
Urmila:: This movie would not have worked without her and no questions to that. She put her heart and soul to breathe life into the Bhoot (paradoxical statement aye). This was the last full-fledged outing with Varma.
Ajay:: Was his usual self.
Rekha:: In the original, this role was assessed by Om Puri. Rekha added a novelty value to the role. Plus it would go down the history of cinema as collaboration of Rekha & RGV.
Nana Patekar:: He adds his own quirkiness to the character.
As usual RGV has played by the unconventional rules resulting in weird camera angles and long drawn shots. I particularly liked the way he toyed by building up momentum and not scaring the audience at the usual places. Instead he catches you off-guard at unusual and unexpected spots. Background music is engaging and adds to the thrill.
If you haven't watched "Raat/ Raatri", you will certainly love "Bhoot" (perhaps the only decent horror RGV made and a successful one!).
Urmila:: This movie would not have worked without her and no questions to that. She put her heart and soul to breathe life into the Bhoot (paradoxical statement aye). This was the last full-fledged outing with Varma.
Ajay:: Was his usual self.
Rekha:: In the original, this role was assessed by Om Puri. Rekha added a novelty value to the role. Plus it would go down the history of cinema as collaboration of Rekha & RGV.
Nana Patekar:: He adds his own quirkiness to the character.
As usual RGV has played by the unconventional rules resulting in weird camera angles and long drawn shots. I particularly liked the way he toyed by building up momentum and not scaring the audience at the usual places. Instead he catches you off-guard at unusual and unexpected spots. Background music is engaging and adds to the thrill.
If you haven't watched "Raat/ Raatri", you will certainly love "Bhoot" (perhaps the only decent horror RGV made and a successful one!).
- AvinashPatalay
- Oct 12, 2010
- Permalink
Good golly gosh!
'Bhoot' is the Hindi word for 'ghost', so this Bollywood spook-movie has a generic title ... and that's a symptom of this film's biggest problem. 'Bhoot' offers a pick-'n'-mix of scenes inspired by earlier (and better) movies, including 'The Tenant', 'The Exorcist', 'Carnival of Souls', 'Repulsion', 'Don't Look Now', 'Vertigo', 'Rosemary's Baby', 'Cat People', 'Rebecca' and the greatest ghost movie of them all: 'The Innocents'. Some of the soundtrack stings in this movie evoke Bernard Herrmann's famous music cues from 'Psycho'.
The movie opens with a title card bearing a personal message from the director, informing us that he made this movie only to scare us, and that we should not infer that it reflects his personal beliefs concerning the supernatural. Fair enough. Then there's a very effective opening sequence, with some jarring and disorienting shots of Bombay traffic. Extremely well done, this ... but it's nothing to do with the rest of the movie.
Vishal and Swati are a young Bombay married couple, very much in love. The dialogue establishes Vishal as a stockbroker, although the very brief scenes in his workplace depict some sort of generic desk job. He and Swati move into a 12th-storey duplex flat, formerly occupied by a young woman named Manjeet, now dead: apparently she went insane and jumped off the balcony. Vishal knows the flat's history but doesn't tell his wife.
It quickly becomes obvious that Manjeet's ghost still haunts the flat. Swati sees her in the mirror. An American rag doll, apparently Manjeet's, is found in the apartment and claimed by Swati. When the couple visit a local funfair, Manjeet appears on the beach and pursues Swati. Eventually, Swati is possessed by the dead woman's spirit. A ghost-boy, his presence unexplained, keeps appearing.
SLIGHT SPOILERS COMING. This film has many moody set-pieces, but they never form a coherent whole. The haunting follows no rules. If Manjeet died on the pavement outside the building, why is her ghost inside the upstairs duplex? An apparently genuine clairvoyant (played by the very beautiful Mekha) is summoned, yet she walks right through the ghost-boy without seeing him. When Swati realises that Manjeet's ghost is real and malevolent, she comforts herself by cuddling Manjeet's doll; this makes no dramatic sense. The building complex has one of those spooky-movie stock characters: the Creepy Caretaker Who Knows a Dark Secret ... until Vishal finds this guy dead with his head twisted back-to-front; if the ghost can do things like this by herself, why does she need to possess Swati's body? Eventually, we learn that Manjeet and her young son (the actual owner of the doll) were murdered by the landlord's son Sanjay. In a creepy sequence worthy of Val Lewton, Manjeet confronts Sanjay in the underground garage, then she takes control of his car's steering wheel without touching it. Then she levitates him. If she can do all this to the man who murdered her, why is she wasting time with the innocent Swati? Answer: because the director wanted a moody 'Exorcist'-style sequence.
Most of this movie is by the numbers. The camera tracks towards the closed eyelids of a corpse. You guessed it: the eyes pop open. Whenever anyone travels from the building's 12th storey to the ground or vice versa, we see a portentous shot of the dark lift shaft: this seems to foreshadow a climactic scene in the lift shaft, but no such climax ever comes. Vishal and Swati have his-'n'-hers nightmares, in two separate sequences -- Swati's nightmare clearly inspired by 'Carnival of Souls' -- but these are merely bonus 'boo!' bits, irrelevant to the storyline.
There are several excellent set-pieces in 'Bhoot', and the director is talented. I liked the breezy montage effect when Vishal and Swati bring the furniture into their new flat. There's a well-edited and (for a Bollywood film) surprisingly erotic sequence when Vishal and Swati make love while watching the BBC World News: very impressive, but leading to nothing. There's an amusing scene when Vishal wants to go to the cinema to see 'Spider-Man' but Swati prefers a chick-flick. (Very obvious product-placement shot for Imax Cinemas.) A subplot about a girl with leukaemia goes nowhere.
Confusingly, most of the dialogue in this film is in Hindi, but the actors periodically lapse into English for a few seconds, then they revert to Hindi. All of the dialogue is post-dubbed, very badly.
'The Innocents' was a very frightening film, because we never learn with certainty whether the ghosts in that movie were genuine phantasms or merely hallucinations of the disturbed governess. In 'Bhoot', we (the audience) see the ghost before any of the on-screen characters see her, so we know straight off that the spectre is real. This is a fatal error. Too much of 'Bhoot' is derivative and generic, yet the director shows sufficient talent that I look forward to his next film. 'Bhoot' has some 'boo!' but not very much boot. Sorry, but I rate this movie only 5 out of 10.
The movie opens with a title card bearing a personal message from the director, informing us that he made this movie only to scare us, and that we should not infer that it reflects his personal beliefs concerning the supernatural. Fair enough. Then there's a very effective opening sequence, with some jarring and disorienting shots of Bombay traffic. Extremely well done, this ... but it's nothing to do with the rest of the movie.
Vishal and Swati are a young Bombay married couple, very much in love. The dialogue establishes Vishal as a stockbroker, although the very brief scenes in his workplace depict some sort of generic desk job. He and Swati move into a 12th-storey duplex flat, formerly occupied by a young woman named Manjeet, now dead: apparently she went insane and jumped off the balcony. Vishal knows the flat's history but doesn't tell his wife.
It quickly becomes obvious that Manjeet's ghost still haunts the flat. Swati sees her in the mirror. An American rag doll, apparently Manjeet's, is found in the apartment and claimed by Swati. When the couple visit a local funfair, Manjeet appears on the beach and pursues Swati. Eventually, Swati is possessed by the dead woman's spirit. A ghost-boy, his presence unexplained, keeps appearing.
SLIGHT SPOILERS COMING. This film has many moody set-pieces, but they never form a coherent whole. The haunting follows no rules. If Manjeet died on the pavement outside the building, why is her ghost inside the upstairs duplex? An apparently genuine clairvoyant (played by the very beautiful Mekha) is summoned, yet she walks right through the ghost-boy without seeing him. When Swati realises that Manjeet's ghost is real and malevolent, she comforts herself by cuddling Manjeet's doll; this makes no dramatic sense. The building complex has one of those spooky-movie stock characters: the Creepy Caretaker Who Knows a Dark Secret ... until Vishal finds this guy dead with his head twisted back-to-front; if the ghost can do things like this by herself, why does she need to possess Swati's body? Eventually, we learn that Manjeet and her young son (the actual owner of the doll) were murdered by the landlord's son Sanjay. In a creepy sequence worthy of Val Lewton, Manjeet confronts Sanjay in the underground garage, then she takes control of his car's steering wheel without touching it. Then she levitates him. If she can do all this to the man who murdered her, why is she wasting time with the innocent Swati? Answer: because the director wanted a moody 'Exorcist'-style sequence.
Most of this movie is by the numbers. The camera tracks towards the closed eyelids of a corpse. You guessed it: the eyes pop open. Whenever anyone travels from the building's 12th storey to the ground or vice versa, we see a portentous shot of the dark lift shaft: this seems to foreshadow a climactic scene in the lift shaft, but no such climax ever comes. Vishal and Swati have his-'n'-hers nightmares, in two separate sequences -- Swati's nightmare clearly inspired by 'Carnival of Souls' -- but these are merely bonus 'boo!' bits, irrelevant to the storyline.
There are several excellent set-pieces in 'Bhoot', and the director is talented. I liked the breezy montage effect when Vishal and Swati bring the furniture into their new flat. There's a well-edited and (for a Bollywood film) surprisingly erotic sequence when Vishal and Swati make love while watching the BBC World News: very impressive, but leading to nothing. There's an amusing scene when Vishal wants to go to the cinema to see 'Spider-Man' but Swati prefers a chick-flick. (Very obvious product-placement shot for Imax Cinemas.) A subplot about a girl with leukaemia goes nowhere.
Confusingly, most of the dialogue in this film is in Hindi, but the actors periodically lapse into English for a few seconds, then they revert to Hindi. All of the dialogue is post-dubbed, very badly.
'The Innocents' was a very frightening film, because we never learn with certainty whether the ghosts in that movie were genuine phantasms or merely hallucinations of the disturbed governess. In 'Bhoot', we (the audience) see the ghost before any of the on-screen characters see her, so we know straight off that the spectre is real. This is a fatal error. Too much of 'Bhoot' is derivative and generic, yet the director shows sufficient talent that I look forward to his next film. 'Bhoot' has some 'boo!' but not very much boot. Sorry, but I rate this movie only 5 out of 10.
- F Gwynplaine MacIntyre
- May 29, 2003
- Permalink
Real scary
Bhoot is one of the Ram Gopal Vermas milestone, and also the only good movie which is of genre horror and also a professional Bollywood film. Before Bhoot, the horror movies made in Bollywood were mostly will fit in comedy. Off course, other than Ramse movies, some serious tries were made like Ankahee and others. But they failed to get attention of the audience or to get good reviews and critics. Even Ramu's previous movies Raat and 'Darna Mana Hain' failed to get any attention.
So before watching Bhoot I have prepared for a movie which will scare you less and make you sleep more. But I was totally wrong. The movie doesn't have ghosts with painted faces, neither it has females wearing bare minimum clothes and throwing other people around like basketball, neither it has Mantriks with skull in their hands. It is a very simple low budget movie.
It is more comparable to Kaun than any other Bollywood horror movies you have seen. Most of the credit goes to the Director, and remaining to the actors, specially Urmila. Urmila is the main character and mostly the story revolves around her, and she fits there so well. Ajay and Nana were as usual at their best leaving us with nothing to curse for. Ajay a simple, middle class husband who is totally helpless and got no clue of what should be done, while Nana a 'Chakram' police inspector who has doubt that something weird is going on. These two characters too are plotted very well, and done with the same power by the actors.
Another good aspect is its short length. The movie starts quickly, without showing us any love story and song. A couple getting into a new apartment house, which is haunted, and the wife gets possessed by the ghost. Its just one line story.
The most important aspects of ghost stories is the environment making, and thats the most positive part of this movie. Just the sound of lift coming up and down makes so much of impact. I will recommend this movie to everyone, who enjoys Bollywood movies, and also to those who enjoys horror movies. In my opinion, this movies should go in "101 must watch Bollywood movies" as it is the only good horror movie made in Bollywood till date.
So before watching Bhoot I have prepared for a movie which will scare you less and make you sleep more. But I was totally wrong. The movie doesn't have ghosts with painted faces, neither it has females wearing bare minimum clothes and throwing other people around like basketball, neither it has Mantriks with skull in their hands. It is a very simple low budget movie.
It is more comparable to Kaun than any other Bollywood horror movies you have seen. Most of the credit goes to the Director, and remaining to the actors, specially Urmila. Urmila is the main character and mostly the story revolves around her, and she fits there so well. Ajay and Nana were as usual at their best leaving us with nothing to curse for. Ajay a simple, middle class husband who is totally helpless and got no clue of what should be done, while Nana a 'Chakram' police inspector who has doubt that something weird is going on. These two characters too are plotted very well, and done with the same power by the actors.
Another good aspect is its short length. The movie starts quickly, without showing us any love story and song. A couple getting into a new apartment house, which is haunted, and the wife gets possessed by the ghost. Its just one line story.
The most important aspects of ghost stories is the environment making, and thats the most positive part of this movie. Just the sound of lift coming up and down makes so much of impact. I will recommend this movie to everyone, who enjoys Bollywood movies, and also to those who enjoys horror movies. In my opinion, this movies should go in "101 must watch Bollywood movies" as it is the only good horror movie made in Bollywood till date.
- manoj-ransing
- Jul 16, 2007
- Permalink
Very creepy horror film.
"Bhoot" is a supernatural horror movie set in urban jungle of Bombay.Vishal(Ajay Devgan),a stock analyst and his wife Swati(Urmila Matondkar)move into a new apartment.The fact that the previous occupant died jumping off from the balcony doesn't deter Vishal.He doesn't inform his wife about that tragedy.Eventually,she finds out and then creepy things do happen.She loses sleep and begins to experience strange incidents,illusions and nightmares.The truth is horrifying."Bhoot" is a wonderfully suspenseful horror film made by Ram Gopal Verma("Raat").The cinematography is breathtaking and the atmosphere is so thick that you could cut it with a chainsaw.The climax is pretty disappointing,though.A must-see for fans of Hindi horror.8 out of 10.
- HumanoidOfFlesh
- Dec 21, 2003
- Permalink
India's best horror movie in true terms!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
"very good film" "excellent film" "outstanding film"
Ram Gopal Varma's Bhoot steps away from conventional Hindi cinema and stands as an outstanding piece of work.
All the actors perform perfectly, the camera work remains consistent and the music as well as the long silences hold the tension. With a quick ending that in context is perfect if a little rushed, the film remains a entertaining fantasy right till the end. Go watch this film and every other Ram Gopal Varma film as well... you wont regret it.
All the actors perform perfectly, the camera work remains consistent and the music as well as the long silences hold the tension. With a quick ending that in context is perfect if a little rushed, the film remains a entertaining fantasy right till the end. Go watch this film and every other Ram Gopal Varma film as well... you wont regret it.
- Taimoor_Afzal
- Jul 27, 2003
- Permalink
Psychologically Scary
The movie was really good and so intensively scary about a couple who moved into a new home and the woman is possessed by a ghost of the person who lived at the apartment. The whole film keeps you in the edge of your seat and makes you jump in a few scenes. It was straightforward and the mystery kept you guessing until the very end. Ajay & Urmila's acting were terrific and what has Urmila done to her hair? It was short, thick and curly; probably to suit the character and long hair won't look good in a horror film. Bhoot is inspired from The Exorcist but Bhoot is a lot better and I did not like The Exorcist one bit. It has to be one of Ram Gopal Verma's best films.
- springsunnywinter
- Jun 20, 2007
- Permalink
Scaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaary!