Home Reviews ‘OYE BHOOTNI KE’ REVIEW | 2 May, 2025

‘OYE BHOOTNI KE’ REVIEW | 2 May, 2025

Released last week in U.P. (at Saharanpur), Vision Motion Films and Sahatayam Films & E Entertainment’s Oye Bhootni Ke (UA) is the story of three fake ghost hunters. The three friends are fun-loving but they get caught in a deadly feud between a shady broker and the owner of a haunted mansion on the outskirts of the city. There’s a gang of ghosts waiting for them inside the mansion, and a mob of thugs waiting outside.

Tanuraj Adhikari has penned a predictable story which doesn’t offer much novelty or excitement to the viewers. Ajay Kailash Yadav, Rahul Ram Singh and Tanuraj Adhikari have written a routine screenplay in which the chills and thrills are not of the level one expects in a drama of this kind. The fear quotient never goes to the point that it can send shivers down the spine. The trio’s dialogues are routine.

Mimoh Chakraborty is ordinary as Amit Bhosale. Rohit Suryavanshi does a fair job as Kabir. Aditya Kumar is average as Ghanta. Amit Sinha is so-so as Jhandu. Diana Khan is hardly impressive as Riddhima. Nikita Sharma performs routinely as Mallika. Pinal Babu passes muster in the role of Nakul. Aryavrat Mishra is passable as Tin Tin.

Ajay Kailash Yadav’s direction is poor. Asif Chandwani’s music is ordinary. Nitin Raikwar’s lyrics are fair. Raju Ray’s song picturisations are nothing to dance about. Pinaki Roy’s background music is functional. Naren A. Gedia’s camerawork is routine. Deepak Sharma’s action and stunt scenes lack thrill. Mahendra Raut’s production designing, and Hussain Shaikh’s art direction are below the mark. Ashfaq Makrani’s editing is loose.

On the whole, Oye Bhootni Ke is a flop show. It collected 36,523/- in 1 week at Rolling Reels, Saharanpur.

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