Three friends who have grown up together in the same building in Mumbai are affected, in different ways, by a dead body found 200 kms away in a lake. As they fight for their friendship, they... Read allThree friends who have grown up together in the same building in Mumbai are affected, in different ways, by a dead body found 200 kms away in a lake. As they fight for their friendship, they can't escape the ugly truth racing towards themThree friends who have grown up together in the same building in Mumbai are affected, in different ways, by a dead body found 200 kms away in a lake. As they fight for their friendship, they can't escape the ugly truth racing towards them
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Pune Highway is a tightly woven psychological thriller that unfolds in real time, turning a single location into a pressure cooker of tension, fear, and raw human emotion. The writing is sharp and nuanced, drawing you into a world where nothing is as it seems and every silence feels loaded. Performances across the board are stellar - natural, layered, and unsettling in the best way. The direction is confident, using space, time, and stillness with precision. Credit to the cinematography and sound design as well - both elevate the suspense and create a mood that lingers long after. A bold, intelligent film that proves you don't need scale to make an impact - just honesty, craft, and control.
The best part of this movie is the star cast. Amir Sadh is brilliant as always and watch it for him.
Jim Sarbh looked lost and didn't do justice to his role.
The movie is fine, creates a lot of suspense but the ending seems abrupt.
I had a lot of expectations from this film but turned out to be disappointing. Seems they wanted to create something epic but it failed.
The chemistry didn't seem good. The friendship didn't seem genuine.
Nicky's character had a lot of scope but they could not do much with it.
Seemed the writer spent hours to work on the script and later got exhausted and left the script.
Jim Sarbh looked lost and didn't do justice to his role.
The movie is fine, creates a lot of suspense but the ending seems abrupt.
I had a lot of expectations from this film but turned out to be disappointing. Seems they wanted to create something epic but it failed.
The chemistry didn't seem good. The friendship didn't seem genuine.
Nicky's character had a lot of scope but they could not do much with it.
Seemed the writer spent hours to work on the script and later got exhausted and left the script.
Pune Highway is a taut, edge-of-your-seat thriller that stays with you long after the credits roll. But what truly elevates this cinematic experience is Amit Sadh's intense and immersive performance that anchors the film with emotional depth and raw vulnerability.
As the story unfolds within the confined space of a rundown hotel on the outskirts of Pune, the characters are pushed to their emotional and moral limits. It's in this pressure cooker environment that Amit Sadh shines.
Amit Sadh plays a man haunted by trauma, paranoia, and the fragility of trust. His portrayal is layered and magnetic-he doesn't just act, he inhabits the character. From his haunted eyes to his sudden outbursts and simmering anxiety, every beat of his performance feels authentic. He masterfully conveys the fear, confusion, and bottled-up anger of someone teetering on the edge, making the audience feel every ounce of his desperation.
What's remarkable is how Amit Sadh never overplays his hand. Even in moments of high drama, his control is precise. He brings a deeply human quality to the role, making his character not just believable but heartbreaking. You're drawn into his world, and you root for him even as the situation spirals out of control.
The ensemble cast is strong, and the direction is tight, but Pune Highway belongs to Amit Sadh. His performance not only showcases his versatility but also reaffirms his place as one of the most compelling actors in contemporary Indian cinema.
If you're a fan of psychological thrillers and powerful performances, Pune Highway is an unmissable ride-and Amit Sadh drives it.
As the story unfolds within the confined space of a rundown hotel on the outskirts of Pune, the characters are pushed to their emotional and moral limits. It's in this pressure cooker environment that Amit Sadh shines.
Amit Sadh plays a man haunted by trauma, paranoia, and the fragility of trust. His portrayal is layered and magnetic-he doesn't just act, he inhabits the character. From his haunted eyes to his sudden outbursts and simmering anxiety, every beat of his performance feels authentic. He masterfully conveys the fear, confusion, and bottled-up anger of someone teetering on the edge, making the audience feel every ounce of his desperation.
What's remarkable is how Amit Sadh never overplays his hand. Even in moments of high drama, his control is precise. He brings a deeply human quality to the role, making his character not just believable but heartbreaking. You're drawn into his world, and you root for him even as the situation spirals out of control.
The ensemble cast is strong, and the direction is tight, but Pune Highway belongs to Amit Sadh. His performance not only showcases his versatility but also reaffirms his place as one of the most compelling actors in contemporary Indian cinema.
If you're a fan of psychological thrillers and powerful performances, Pune Highway is an unmissable ride-and Amit Sadh drives it.
Just watched Pune Highway and at first I thought it was a murder mystery but it's not. It's more of a drama that slowly unfolds, and honestly, I kinda liked that by the end.
It's about friends stuck in a crisis, and things get really tense. The acting's solid, and it messes with your head in a subtle way. Not a typical thriller, but it keeps you hooked with a tense mix of fear and guilt, but it's also darkly funny in parts. The performances are uniformly great and emotionally on point.
Overall an unusual and compelling film to unpack. These days those are few and far between. Highly recommend if you like the unexpected.
It's about friends stuck in a crisis, and things get really tense. The acting's solid, and it messes with your head in a subtle way. Not a typical thriller, but it keeps you hooked with a tense mix of fear and guilt, but it's also darkly funny in parts. The performances are uniformly great and emotionally on point.
Overall an unusual and compelling film to unpack. These days those are few and far between. Highly recommend if you like the unexpected.
Adapted from Rahul da Cunha's play, Pune Highway is a slow-burn psychological thriller that trades jump scares for moral unease. The film pivots around a group of childhood friends whose lives unravel after a body is found near their apartment complex - a narrative ripe with paranoia, guilt, and suppressed history.
The tension never explodes, it festers. Amit Sadh and Jim Sarbh deliver the expected fireworks - both playing men haunted in different keys. But it's Sudeep Modak, as the quiet, watchful Inspector Pethe, who is the film's quietest coup. His performance is subtle and unsettling, never demanding attention but always commanding it. There's something almost Kafkaesque in the way he draws out confessions - not with force, but with stillness.
The film's pacing stumbles in parts, and its theatrical roots occasionally peek through, but Pune Highway succeeds in crafting an atmosphere that stays with you - grimy, grey, and eerily familiar.
The tension never explodes, it festers. Amit Sadh and Jim Sarbh deliver the expected fireworks - both playing men haunted in different keys. But it's Sudeep Modak, as the quiet, watchful Inspector Pethe, who is the film's quietest coup. His performance is subtle and unsettling, never demanding attention but always commanding it. There's something almost Kafkaesque in the way he draws out confessions - not with force, but with stillness.
The film's pacing stumbles in parts, and its theatrical roots occasionally peek through, but Pune Highway succeeds in crafting an atmosphere that stays with you - grimy, grey, and eerily familiar.
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- TriviaAll entries contain spoilers
- SoundtracksAali Ga
Performed by Sunidhi Chauhan
Written by Sudeep Naik
Details
- Runtime
- 2h 1m(121 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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