Andhadhun

The final shot is the most brilliant middle finger in cinematic history. Did Akash sell Simi to the doctor for her corneas? Did he kill her himself? Did he ever lose his sight at all? The film refuses to answer. It hands you the evidence and says, “You decide.” Andhadhun (which translates to "unrestrained" or "deafening") is not a film about a blind pianist. It’s a film about the stories we tell ourselves to sleep at night. Every character justifies their horror. Every character is the hero of their own delusion.

If you haven’t seen it yet, stop reading and go watch it. For the rest of you who are still recovering from that rabbit-in-a-hat finale, let’s break down the chaos. The film introduces us to Akash (Ayushmann Khurrana), a piano prodigy who pretends to be blind to improve his focus and rake in better tips. It’s a quirky, harmless scam. He plays beautifully, lives humbly, and even falls for the neighbor’s girl, Sophie (Radhika Apte). Andhadhun

The film becomes a brutal, hilarious, and deeply cynical game of shifting alliances. You don’t know who to trust because every character has the moral compass of a roulette wheel. And then, there is the ending. The final shot is the most brilliant middle

As Akash walks away, he smoothly taps away a tin can lying in his path with his cane. Did he ever lose his sight at all

He wasn’t blind. He was never blind. Or is he just that good at faking it?

Her performance is the spine of the film. In any other thriller, Simi would be a caricature. Here, she’s the scariest person you’ve ever met because she looks exactly like your neighbor. Just when you think the plot is a simple "blind man vs. murderer," Raghavan throws in a detour involving a corrupt doctor, a lottery ticket, and a black-market organ racket. The middle act is pure, adrenaline-fueled chaos. Akash gets actually blinded, gets chased, gets kidnapped, and teams up with a murderous doctor to take down Simi.