
Genre: Thriller
Release Date: 27th October, 2017
Cast: Manoj Bajpayee, Adarsh Gourav, Smita Tambe, Kumud Mishra
Writer/Director: Atanu Mukharjee
Producer/s: Manish Mundra
Plot:
Rukh Movie Review Rating: 3/5 Stars (Three stars)
Star Cast: Adarsh Gourav, Manoj Bajpayee, Smita Tambe, Kumud Mishra
Director: Atanu Mukherjee
What’s Good: Attention staggering performances by everyone, path-less-travelled screenplay and a story that holds your guts till the last second.
What’s Bad: Pace gets sluggish sometimes diverting your well-invested attention
Loo Break: Loo break in a whodunit thriller? You’ll be declared as the murderer if you take one
Watch or Not?: Watch it only if you’ve the patience to sit through and let the story sink in like a slow reacting drug.
User Rating:
Rukh is about the mysterious life of a textile businessman Diwakar (Manoj Bajpayee). He plays chess with his ill Father, talks with his wife and takes a drive which proves to be his last one. His son Dhruv (Adarsh Gourav) who was living his hostel life in exile returns to home facing this unfortunate death of his father.
The entire story is about the aftermath of Diwakar’s death and Dhruv’s inclusion in the investigation. It also unveils shades of people revolving around Diwakar’s life. Adarsh’s backstory dating back to his school time is also showed mounting your doubts about the arising situations.
Rukh Review: Script Analysis
Atanu Mukherjee, never for a second makes you feel he’s a debuting with Rukh. He effulgently carries multiple sub-plots within the story. Manoj Bajpayee, Adarsh Gourav, Kumud Mishra – everyone has abounding things going on yet so crisply managed by Atanu.
Entering Bollywood with a genre as risky as whodunit won Atanu brownie points even before it got released. To make your actors perform along with ensuring the story doesn’t get blurred in the way is what a good director’s basic job is. Atanu scores a home run on the first pitch of his career.
Rukh Review: Star Performance
After playing small in My Name Is Khan and Mom, Adarsh Gourav has hit the ball out of the park with Rukh. He speaks with his silence. Staying calm and composed without getting boring is an achievement, Adarsh wins it.
Manoj Bajpayee has mastered the art of blowing everyone’s mind with his performance every time. Though he’s around for comparatively shorter screen time, his every second of presence makes you feel his pain.
Smita Tambe as Nandini (Diwakar’s wife) is an artist who sketches her role with every passing second. By the end of the film, you saw her role as an abstract painting of sadness. Kumud Mishra who plays Manoj Bajpayee’s businessman partner remains true to his character exploring different shades of him throughout.