Khauf Review: When Real Life Is the Real Horror

Written by: Siddhartha Krishnan | 7 Min Read

(You can watch the YouTube review of this web series here – http://bit.ly/3GDQ0KK)

In my opinion, the scariest pieces of cinema are those that portray reality in imaginary worlds. While the horror genre offers the fluidity to blend the real with the unreal, it is often the stories grounded in real-world settings, characters, and societal decay that manage to terrify the most. These films give the audience the unsettling feeling that something from their familiar world has seeped into the imagined world of horror. This could be a room in an opulent house in Georgetown, Washington D.C., where a little girl is possessed by the devil himself (The Exorcist, 1973), or the remote Overlook Hotel in Colorado, with its bloody past and isolated winters, maintained by a lone caretaker (The Shining, 1980). Closer home, it could be a room in a government women’s hostel on the outskirts of Delhi, haunted by a ghost and steeped in everyday fears (Khauf, 2025).

In The Exorcist, while the central plot revolves around an exorcism within a single room, it is also the story of a mother willing to go to any lengths to save her daughter. In The Shining, though the Overlook Hotel becomes a sinister character in its own right, steeped in a violent past, the heart of the film lies in a man battling his own psychological demons—who ultimately succumbs to the hotel’s dark influence and turns against his family. In Khauf, a young woman from a smaller city in India, carrying the scars of a brutal sexual assault, comes to the capital in search of freedom, only to find that the suffocating male gaze offers none. She becomes easy prey for a ghost that haunts a hostel room, an evil spirit that feeds on her vulnerability.

It is through this lens—where horror emerges not just from the supernatural, but from the all-too-real fears rooted in our society, that I will be reviewing Khauf, perhaps one of the finest horror web series to come out of India in recent years.

The Story

Khauf centers around a young woman named Madhu (Monica Panwar), who escapes from Gwalior to be with her boyfriend in Delhi. Haunted by a traumatic past—she was brutally assaulted by a group of men—Madhu sees Delhi as a chance to leave those memories behind. But she soon realizes it’s not as easy as she hoped. The city’s constant male gaze feels like the ghost of her past, relentlessly following her.

Uncomfortable living in a flat shared by her boyfriend and his male friends, she moves to a hostel on the outskirts of the city. Only one room is available—the one that once belonged to a girl who reportedly died in an accident. The four other women on the floor harbor a dark secret. They are trapped by a sinister presence that won’t let them leave the hostel, and they believe the evil spirit resides in that very room. Fearing the spirit will possess Madhu and unleash terror on them all, they try to stop her from staying there.

But Madhu refuses to give in to their warnings. With no one else to turn to, the room is her only shot at survival.

Screenplay and Technical Aspects

Khauf weaves together multiple subplots that converge in the end. There’s Madhu’s central story, the individual backstories of the four hostel mates on her floor, and the mystery of the dead girl who once lived in her room. Alongside these, there’s the hostel warden’s friend—an alcoholic police officer, a woman who frequently visits the hostel to drink with the warden, while secretly searching for her missing son, whom she believes has fallen into the wrong hands. Adding to the mix is a mysterious hakim living in the dingy alleys of Old Delhi, who preys on the souls of vulnerable women to prolong his own life. All of these threads eventually tie into Madhu’s journey and play a crucial role in the climax.

As hinted earlier in my review, Khauf wouldn’t be half as terrifying without its real-life parallels. The series holds up a mirror to society in ways rarely seen in recent Indian storytelling, whether on OTT platforms or in theatres. It doesn’t rely on monologues or moralizing speeches. Instead, it quietly reveals the everyday reality of being a woman in Delhi—on buses, at workplaces, even in spaces presumed to be safe. Judgment, harassment, and constant surveillance are routine, and they carry consequences. This creates a toxic environment where crime festers.

The real-life monsters in Khauf far outweigh the supernatural ones. It’s this chilling parallel between the horrors of the real world and the supernatural that makes the show deeply unsettling, and at times, hard to watch.

That said, Khauf isn’t an edge-of-the-seat horror flick. It moves deliberately, simmering with tension, and landing its punches at the right moments. Some might call it a slow burn, but I never found it dull. The screenplay kept me anticipating something unexpected, and when those moments arrived, they were rewarding. Although, these aren’t your typical horror beats. But the series still delivers its share of jump scares, gore, and supernatural elements to keep horror fans engaged. Much of the credit goes to writer Smita Singh (Sacred Games, Raat Akeli Hai), cinematographer Pankaj Kumar (Tumbbad, Haider, Ship of Theseus), and production designer Nitin Zihani Choudhary (Tumbbad, Kalki 2898 AD).

The writing, for the most part, is engaging. While some critics have rightly called out the lore elements as unclear, these are rare missteps. Where Khauf truly shines is in the seamless blending of the real and the supernatural brought to life through striking imagery and meticulous execution. The sequencing of events and how they converge in the end is satisfying to watch.

The production design, in particular, sustains an atmosphere of dread even when scenes aren’t overtly grotesque. There’s a constant sense of gloom and impending danger—the hallmark of effective horror storytelling.

The Performances

Khauf wouldn’t be nearly as affecting without its stellar performances. The casting is pitch perfect. Apart from the menacing presence of Rajat Kapoor, a familiar face, the rest of the cast may not be household names, yet they carry the film with remarkable strength. Monica Panwar, as Madhu, delivers a standout performance, balancing vulnerability and quiet resilience with striking authenticity.

The supporting cast is equally compelling: Chum Darang as Svetlana, Geetanjali Kulkarni as Constable Ilu Mishra, Shalini Vatsa as the stern yet layered warden Gracie, Priyanka Setia as Rima, Rashmi Mann as Nikki, and Riya Shukla as Komal. Each of them brings depth and nuance to their roles, making the characters not only believable but deeply human.

Verdict

In an era where horror storytelling, whether on web or in theatres, often leans on tired tropes like jump scares, gore, folklore, and a parade of ghosts, goblins, witches, vampires, yakshas and yakshis, often diluted with humor or drowned in grotesquery, Khauf stands apart. It uses many of these familiar elements, yet tells an original, deeply human story, one that terrifies not because of what’s imagined, but because of how much it borrows from the real world.

It feels as if the true monsters of life have possessed the supernatural ones. And that’s what makes Khauf truly unsettling. It provokes thought, evokes empathy, and scares in equal measure.

For that, it absolutely deserves a watch.

Khauf is streaming on Amazon Prime Video in India.

IMDb rating: 7.6/10

My Rating: 4/5

***

About the author –

Siddhartha Krishnan is the author of ‘Two and a Half Rainbows – A Collection of Short Stories’. An enthusiastic blogger he shares his articles, essays, travelogues, book and movie reviews on his blog (www.whatsonsidsmind.com).

The Zone of Interest – Movie Review | A Unique Perspective on the Holocaust Horror

Written by: Siddhartha Krishnan | 4 Min Read

(Trailer – The Zone of Interest)

I had been eagerly awaiting the release of The Zone of Interest on OTT, since it had a limited theatrical release in India. Now, it’s available on Amazon Prime Video. The film won the Best International Feature and Best Sound Design at the 2023 Oscars. It also won the Grand Prix at the Cannes Film Festival. Notably, the Indian film All We Imagine as Light, directed by Payal Kapadia, currently holds the same honor.

Jonathan Glazer’s The Zone of Interest is a German historical drama that delves into the lives of Auschwitz commandant Rudolf Höss and his wife, Hedwig. They reside in an opulent house right next to the Auschwitz concentration camp. Shot in a near-documentary style, the film’s camera serves as a silent observer.

The Höss family goes about their daily routines, basking in the comforts of their luxurious existence. The children swim and fish, while Hedwig spends her days gardening and maintaining their household with the help of several servants. Yet, next door, there is a relentless cacophony of shouting, gunshots, roaring furnaces, and arriving trains. Rudolf’s grim task is to oversee the extermination of thousands of Jews, a horrifying job he executes with chilling precision.

The film is a profound meditation on human depravity. It starkly portrays how easily we can desensitize ourselves, transforming into monstrous beings complicit in one of history’s greatest atrocities. The film forces us to confront the banality of evil and the chilling ease with which ordinary lives can coexist with unimaginable horror.

The Zone of Interest has been rightly hailed as a masterpiece for its minimalistic yet novel approach. It presents scenes that are strikingly unique in cinema. How do you depict violence without showing it? How do you convey depravity with a nonchalant, matter-of-fact demeanor? This film is a masterclass in both.

The aesthetics are strikingly contemporary, despite being a period piece. It feels like a window where the past and present gaze at each other, blurring the lines of time.

Please keep in mind that The Zone of Interest is not your typical Holocaust or World War II film. There isn’t a single scene of bloodshed, yet the film is profoundly grotesque. Its screenplay is unlike anything seen before in this genre. At just 1 hour and 45 minutes, it covers a lot of ground at its own deliberate pace, delivering its message with immense power.

The film is as hard-hitting as the classics on the subject. Steven Spielberg even called it the best Holocaust film since his own Schindler’s List (1993). Need I say more?

Verdict –
IMDb rating: 7.4/10
My rating: 4.5/5

*****

About the author –

Siddhartha Krishnan is the author of ‘Two and a Half Rainbows – A Collection of Short Stories’. An enthusiastic blogger he shares his articles, essays, travelogues, book and movie reviews on his blog (www.whatsonsidsmind.com).

Poacher – Review | A Gripping Police Procedural that is Helmed by a Diverse Cast

Written by Siddhartha Krishnan | 5 Min Read

Richie Mehta, director of Emmy award-winning investigative drama series Delhi Crime returns with another police procedural. But this time he shifts the gaze from a city to a jungle to unravel the mysteries behind India’s biggest poaching case. Poacher is based on the real-life incidents of Operation Shikhar that took place in the Malayattoor forest division in Kerala’s Ernakulam district between 2015 to 2017. The investigation unearthed the nexus between elephant poachers, government officials, carvers, and ivory art dealers leading to 72 arrests across India.

In this TV series too, Richie Mehta retains some of the qualities that characterized his previous venture from a technical standpoint: use of hand-held cameras, tight close-up shots, saturated colors to evoke tension, and a non-linear narrative that adds to the mystery and isn’t too difficult to grasp.

But there are certain creative choices made in Poacher that make it stand out among other police procedurals:

The use of animals in the storytelling –

Among recent films, director Robert Eggers has used animals in interesting ways. In The Witch the simple goat turns out to be a vessel for a demonic being that helps the protagonist, Thomasin, find her way to the world of witches. Similarly, a seagull in The Lighthouse is said to house the spirits of dead sailors.

In Poacher the animals behave the way you would see on a safari. Even if we don’t notice them, they are always watching us. They don’t come with human-like qualities. They are just bemused onlookers. In a way asking the homo sapien: if you’ve put the fire in the jungle, whose job is it to douse it? This I felt was a stroke of genius by the writers because they saved the screenplay from being verbose, and yet managed to evoke the required emotion.

Multi-lingual dialogues to lend authenticity –

Poacher is truly a multi-lingual film. I say this because the characters speak in the language, they are supposed to in the situation they are in. They switch between Malayalam, Hindi, and English often. There are also scenes where Dibyendu Bhattacharya’s character, ‘Neel’ speaks to his family in Bengali.

The switching between languages, sometimes even within a scene, was seamless because the characters were doing so out of need and not to satisfy the audience. It also helped them stay in character and made the storytelling more believable.

Inventive camerawork:

For most of its run-time the camera is right on the faces of the actors in Poacher. To enhance the tension of the tight close-ups, cinematographer, Johan Heurlin Aidt, has chosen to go with saturated colors and a single light in the background. This is a technique that was used by him in Delhi Crime (Season 1) as well to evoke claustrophobia.

However, it was the contrast between the way the animals, the jungle, and nature were shot vis-à-vis the human characters that did the trick. Wide angles as opposed to close-ups. The intention was to show with whom the accountability lies. This aspect of the cinematography is easy to miss because it is understated. But is effective.

A diverse cast –

Poacher boasts of a diverse cast of skilled actors coming from different parts of the country, many of whom could speak more than one language. The casting team deserves all the credit for managing to arrive at such a perfect ensemble. The side actors too were terrific in their parts even if they had just a scene or two.

The three lead actors Nimisha Sajayan as Mala Jogi, Roshan Mathew as Alan Joseph, and Dibyendu Bhattacharya as Neel Banerjee, were on top of their game, feeding off each other to give the viewers several memorable moments. Given that the camera was right on their faces for most of the show, there was very little room to falter. Only seasoned actors of their caliber could have pulled off the scenes with such confidence.

Poacher is one of those shows, whose faults can be forgiven because it is so well-intentioned. It has the sparse quality of showing systemic problems as is, without trying to pin the blame on a group of people as that would have amounted to intellectual laziness. In a real-life case of this scale, the villains had to be many. Furthermore, it also shows the audience the mirror, and asks, if we too are complicit in the crime.

Poacher diverts from its chosen tone briefly toward the end when it chooses to be a bit didactic. Some may say it was warranted to send the message across while others may contend that the makers should have stuck to more show than tell. But this does not take away what is good in this TV series.

My Verdict –

Among the current lot of police procedurals and investigative dramas available on OTT, Poacher is refreshing in its approach. It is a gripping police procedural that is technically brilliant and is helmed by a diverse cast that has delivered terrific performances. You can watch the show on Amazon Prime Video.

IMDB rating – 7.7/10

My Rating – 4/5

About the author –

Siddhartha Krishnan is the author of ‘Two and a Half Rainbows – A Collection of Short Stories’. He is also an enthusiastic blogger, and on his blog (www.whatsonsidsmind.com), he puts out his articles, essays, travelogues, book recommendations, and film reviews.