Review of Welcome Home: Two census takers accidentally ring the incorrect doorbell
This week, the actor Boloram Das is playing two direct-to-streamer flicks in full creep mode. Das portrays a driver in Pepper Chicken who takes his passenger Dipannita Sharma on a tour of hell. The film directed by Ratan Sil Sharma is available on ShemarooMe Box Office.portrays Das as a kind, protective, and courteous person at first who, after reciting Pash poetry, shows his darker side. Despite wasting its early potential, the passable thriller keeps moving forward thanks to the talents of its two main actors.
Boloram Das plays a much more menacing and effective character in the SonyLIV movie Welcome Home, one who makes terrible promises and then acts on them. Other notable performances in Welcome Home include those of its female leads, who poignantly highlight the movie's themes of emancipation and incarceration.
Ankita Narang wrote the screenplay, while Pushkar Mahabal expertly directed and edited it. A constant sense of fear and claustrophobia is created by Saee Bhope's superb handheld cinematography as two women inadvertently enter a house of horrors.
Whether it's a census or an election, everyone counts. Enumerator Anuja (Kashmira Irani) and her colleague Neha (Swarda Thigale) knock on the door of the single house in a town on their list, bearing in mind this admirable idea. Prerna (Tina Bhatia), who is extremely pregnant, opens the door. Anuja comes across as suspicious because of her childlike demeanor and her body bruises. Along with Prerna's strange-eyed cook (Boloram Das), silent father (Shashi Bhushan), and frightening-looking mother (Akshita Arora).
Did you not think them strange, Anuja queries Neha. Neha responds, "Very, very odd." Even still, Anuja is touched by Prerna's condition because she loves her little liberties and has an overbearing father and fiance. It takes some time for them to leave once she and Neha return to the house.
Throughout the 126-minute story, Pushkar Mahabal keeps his finger on the wound, causing the audience to cringe multiple times. Excellent performances from all the cast members, particularly from Swarda Thigale and Kashmira Irani, guarantee that the survival drama with a limited budget pays off handsomely.
The inmates of the house are imprisoned by a culture of abuse and control, which is skillfully highlighted by the straightforward storyline. The new victims are also changed by the horrible interactions with reprehensible males and supportive women. Rather than being helpless victims, Anuja—who has been struggling to keep her job—and Neha—who has a bully of a brother—emerge as courageous warriors who never give up on their oppressors. Welcome Home exposes the heartbreaking reality that their emancipation is laced with blood, one suspenseful moment at a time…
I watched Welcome Home, one of the scariest films ever produced by Bollywood. On the Sony Liv channel, it is. Many complaints led to the removal of this movie from the OTT platform, however it has since been reinstated in November. I was astounded to learn that this is based on an actual occurrence that took place in Nagpur. This is an adult film with a lot of killings and violence. It's terrifying and unsettling.This social thriller film depicts domestic abuse of both women and children. In order to collect census data for the hamlet, two public school teachers are chosen, and they visit a distant home where just one family resides. The whole plot revolves around what occurs to the girls and in the house. It's scary, spine-tingling, riveting, dark, daring, and terrifying,disturbing, well made movie (except for a few loose endsin the beginning). If you like horror, crime story, and psycho movies do watch it at your own risk..