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Kaalidhar Laapata: Anupama Chopra Maps the Mystery—It’s a Disappearing Act Worth Your Watch


Updated: July 05, 2025 07:05

Image Source: Cine-tales

Anupama Chopra's THR India review of Kaalidhar Laapata describes it as a rooted yet emotionally charged dramedy that walks the thin line between sentiment and sincerity. Madhumita helms the Hindi adaptation of her own Tamil film KD where Abhishek Bachchan is the hero who gives up heroism for humility, and Daivik Baghela is the rambunctious kid who doubles as his unlikely stabilizer.

Narrative Highlights

The story is about Kaalidhar, a middle-aged man suffering from memory loss, who overhears his family's plan to abandon him at the Kumbh Mela so that they need not pay for his medical expenses.

Fleeing from treachery, he encounters Ballu, an orphaned street-smart child with survival instincts. Their bond is the emotional fulcrum of the film.

The two friends embark on a fantastical road trip in a car, ticking off Kaalidhar's long-dormant bucket list while reclaiming friendship, dignity, and laughter.

Performance Pulse

Abhishek Bachchan delivers a low-key performance, bringing Kaalidhar to life with vulnerability and gentle humor.

Daivik Baghela resists the temptation of overacting precocious child and provides Ballu with grit and realism.

Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub also contributes substance as the angst-ridden younger brother, humanizing the film's even most ethically dubious characters.

Craft & Critique

The film is shot with warmth in rural Madhya Pradesh, lending it a grounded, earthy texture.

While the memory-erasing device is used sporadically and some of the emotional scenes are too simplistic, the film avoids melodrama by subtle direction and natural performances.

The film's pace is equaled in its rhythm and background music, with the exception of the underutilized Kaalidhar's lost love subplot (Nimrat Kaur).

Emotional Undercurrents

The movie touches on abandonment, second chances, and the gentle influence of friendship across generations.

It reminds the audience that recovery tends to happen in the most unexpected corners—and individuals. Despite its storytelling missteps, the optimism and emotional authenticity of the film linger long after the credits roll.

Sources: THR India, Times of India, India Today, Moneycontrol, ZEE5 Blog, YouTube (THR India)
 

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