Movie Reviews
Window Seat Movie Review: A whodunit that is laced with many twists
Evaluate: Window Seat marks the directorial debut of actress Sheetal Shetty. There have been suspicions whether or not or not her movie is predicated on The Woman On The Practice, however barring a scene or two, there may be nothing that ties it to that. As an alternative, this finally ends up being a psychological thriller that unravels with completely different twists, some predictable and a few not. It’s a novel watch.
The movie begins with what appears to be like a homicide scene, following which one will get to fulfill the protagonist Raghu, a loner singer, who works for Anjali, who owns a lounge. The latter fancies him, however Raghu is in love with a thriller woman he spots every day from his window seat from the prepare. When he spots her being killed from the identical window, he needs to assist her, however finally ends up being embroiled in a narrative that has extra questions than solutions. Will he reach understanding the reality?
A few of the greatest scenes within the movie wouldn’t have the protagonists, however the law enforcement officials who’re making an attempt to assist Raghu out. We get to see a tough and hard cop, who cares for nothing and is brutal, not like the over-the-top girls law enforcement officials typically seen in Kannada movies. The movie additionally has some stunning visuals that showcase the great thing about inside Karnataka, whereas the soundtrack is the opposite large win. The music and background rating units a quite fascinating tone to the movie.
Window Seat takes its tempo to unfold and when issues start to unravel, the story travels shortly. The casting is almost excellent. Nirup Bhandari seems his greatest and has given one among his greatest performances thus far. Amrutha Iyengar shines too, and excels in emotional scenes. The opposite performer who makes a mark is Lekha Naidu because the cop, who is a good discover and may get extra roles after this. Suraj from Comedy Khiladigalu is entertaining as her sidekick. P Ravi Shankar in a cameo is a enjoyment of his Abdul Kalam like look.
Window Seat will not be a daily masala movie, nor does it fall within the standard woman-director stereotype both. It tries to be edgy and provides you a thriller expertise, and practically succeeds on most counts.