Set almost entirely within a sprawling, old-world homestay, the narrative brings together a group of friends and acquaintances for what is meant to be a celebratory getaway. There is laughter, alcohol and the easy rhythm of people who have known each other for years. Yet, Kapoor establishes early on that something is amiss. The discomfort is subtle but persistent, largely emanating from the presence of Sohrab Handa, played with relish by Vinay Pathak. Acerbic, intrusive and disarmingly perceptive, Sohrab has an uncanny ability to prod at emotional fault lines, couching his barbs in humour that is as disquieting as it is incisive.
When Sohrab is found murdered, the film does not lurch into high-pitched suspense. Instead, it tightens inward. The investigation, led with admirable restraint by Saurabh Shukla’s weary inspector, unfolds almost as an afterthought, secondary to the emotional unravelling of those present. Kapoor resists the temptation to turn this into a puzzle-box narrative. The reveal, when it arrives, is not engineered for gasps but for reflection. In that sense, the film is far more invested in the “why” than the “who”, positioning itself as a study of relational fractures rather than a genre exercise.
What elevates the film is its acute understanding of interpersonal dynamics. Conversations overlap, silences linger, and awkward humour fills the spaces where honesty should reside. The writing captures the rhythms of real interaction, the defensiveness, the passive aggression, the sudden bursts of candour that leave everyone slightly exposed. Characters such as the introspective professor played by Ranvir Shorey and the observant psychologist embodied by Kapoor himself serve as conduits into the film’s deeper thematic concerns, gently dissecting the masks people wear in social settings.
The performances across the board are exemplary. Vinay Pathak, in particular, is magnetic. He makes Sohrab both repellant and compelling, a man whose inability to filter his thoughts renders him oddly honest in a room full of carefully curated personas. There is a fleeting moment of vulnerability that shows him in another light and Pathak handles it with remarkable sensitivity. Neil Bhoopalam and Palomi Ghosh, as the hosts struggling to maintain composure amid the chaos, lend the film an emotional anchor, while Koel Purie and Sadiya Siddiqui bring quiet nuance to characters who might otherwise have been relegated to the margins. It is also refreshing to see veteran MK Raina utilised in a role that carries a touch of ambiguity.
Technically, the film is equally assured. Despite being largely confined to a single setting, the cinematography is strikingly evocative. The camera navigates the interiors with a fluidity that mirrors the shifting dynamics between characters, finding new textures in familiar spaces. Light and shadow are used effectively to heighten the underlying tension, ensuring that the visual language remains as engaging as the dialogue-driven narrative.
Rajat Kapoor’s direction is measured and confident, even when the film risks overextending itself with a large ensemble. At times, the narrative threatens to lose focus, its thriller elements diluted by the sheer volume of interpersonal threads. Yet, it consistently regains footing through its sharp observations and compelling performances. Over the years, Kapoor has made a lot of actor friends and he knows their quirks and delightfully brings them to screen, with their consent, of course.
Everybody Loves Sohrab Handa may not fully satisfy as a traditional mystery but that is hardly its aim. It is, instead, a quietly unsettling reflection on the contradictions of human relationships, on how affection and resentment often coexist, and how, under the right circumstances, that uneasy balance can tip into something far more destructive. Everybody Loves Sohrab Handa is currently streaming on Zee5.
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