Baramulla, starring Manav Kaul and Bhasha Sumbli, is directed by Aditya Suhas Jambhale. The film explores Kashmir’s haunting realities, focusing on the truth about Kashmiri Pandits—a truth more unsettling than ghosts.
The initial pace is slow and may challenge viewers’ patience, making it harder to connect early on.
The movie portrays Kashmir beyond the usual images: beyond the snow-capped mountains or the violence-ridden headlines. It presents a Kashmir that is simultaneously terrifying and scared—a blend of many contrasting emotions.
Baramulla defies easy classification. It is neither a straightforward supernatural thriller nor a purely political film, although it contains elements of both.
"Whenever you hear the word Kashmir, you paint only two pictures, both of them extremely opposite to each other. One of them has snow-capped mountains, the Kashmir, which gets printed on postcards and calendars. The other one has raging shots and bloodstains."
"Baramulla incorporates all these elements into the Kashmir that should still haunt us!"
This film is worth watching for Manav Kaul’s gripping performance and a climax that lingers in the heart, providing a profoundly respectful look at Kashmir’s scars.
Author’s Summary: Baramulla powerfully reveals Kashmir’s unseen wounds through Manav Kaul’s intense performance and an emotionally devastating finale that lingers long after the credits.