About the dreaded Indian rakshasu Indian films have always had their fans.
I have no doubt that they will also like this one, because all the attributes of Indian cinema (songs, dances, love) are in this film, but this product can hardly be called a horror film or fiction.
A strange creature (rakshasu) terrorizes the district and eats hotel guests (and not only them). To fight with him has a new hostess of the hotel Ahana (Bipasha Basu)
There are a number of advantages at the beginning of the film: the creature looks original, the plot is more or less logical (as for a horror film), the Indian flavor.
However, during the film, it becomes clear that the director built the film around the heroine B. Basu and looked at all other factors, to put it mildly, through his fingers. More than 90% of the film we see the heroine Basu in different angles and in different costumes, while each of her eyes the operator keeps very for a long time, and she looks at everything she sees, well very a lot ...
The remaining characters in the film do not play a principal role, but serve as a background for the main character, so the actors do not even try to play.
The creature appears sporadically and at the same time has the ability to change its dimensions (from a tail the size of a person at the beginning of the film to an entire creature the size of a person during the film). However, sometimes it changes several times during the episode, causing surprise and disappointment. The sounds emitted by the creature, except for abrasion, will not cause anything to the viewer, and by the second half of the film will already irritate.
The plot failures are very numerous. For example: the main character descends on a rope into the caves with a flashlight and a backpack and on foot tries to catch up with the creature, and later it turns out that you can safely drive there by car; in the plot, the creature eats almost half of the guests of an expensive hotel, no one is particularly surprised, the police do not even try to call for reinforcements, etc.
3 out of 10