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Kakuda review: Riteish Deshmukh rescues fun moments from a grumpy ghost in this horror comedy

Kakuda movie review: Aditya Sarpotdar's latest horror comedy after Munjya and Zombivli is a solid can-watch. Don't expect jump-out-of-your-skin horror or ROFL comedy from the Sonakshi Sinha, Riteish Deshmukh starrer, though. Rating: 3 stars.

July 12, 2024 / 13:05 IST
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Kakuda review: Sonakshi Sinha and Saqib Saleem in Kakuda. The story pits the rational mind against an emotional bhoot, with an almost obsequious ghost hunter mediating. (Image courtesy Zee5)
Kakuda review: Sonakshi Sinha and Saqib Saleem in Kakuda. The story pits the rational mind against an emotional bhoot, with an almost obsequious ghost hunter mediating. (Image courtesy Zee5)

Har sawaal ka jawaab science ke paas nahi hota (Science doesn't have the answers for all questions)," ghost hunter Victor James (Riteish Deshmukh) tells a newly married Sonakshi Sinha in horror-comedy 'Kakuda' on Zee5. It's still early in the film at this point. Sonakshi Sinha, who plays Indira (Indu for short), a rational girl with a supernatural problem, is at the hospital with her new husband Sunny (Saqib Saleem) who's been cursed by the local ghost of Ratauri village: Kakuda. Riteish Deshmukh who plays a ghost hunter with a track record of having vanquished or appeased 127 chudails (witches), 72 pisach (ghouls) and 37 bhoots (ghosts), is at the same hospital playing matchmaker to a newly dead maiden and a heavy metal musician who was electrocuted by his guitar. The science vs supernatural debate is quickly decided in favour of the supernatural, and the film moves on.

Riteish Deshmukh and Sonakshi Sinha in horror comedy film Kakuda. (Image courtesy Zee5)

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Kakuda finds its comic moments in the crevasses of what reads like a cautionary tale derived from Indian folklore: a remote village where a marginalized ghost curses those who fail to honour and welcome him by leaving a tiny door open - it could be the stuff of a Vijaydan Detha story.

Where the direction and cinematography help is in layering suggestions of Kakuda's fearsome curse. Where the movie drags a bit is in the later "horror" sequences with the scarecrow, the ghost and the possessed human offering nothing new in terms of how they are imagined, their place in the story or how they are enacted.