![]() ![]() ![]() And it was the next scene that saw my tears roll down my cheeks. Despite her thousands of attempts to stop them, these terrorists enter the store and opened fire at the drum. But before that, their neighbours had already told them where he was hiding. Seeing them knock at the door, Sharda Pandit (Bhasha Sumbli) asks her husband to hide in a rice drum. Later we see a couple of terrorists entering Anupam Kher’s home. But soon after, we see a huge rally of Kashmiri Muslim youths setting Pandits’ houses on fire while asking them to Raliv, Galiv yaa Tchaliv means either convert into Islam, die or leave Kashmir. Seeing him getting beaten up, his good friend Abdul holds his hand and asks him to run from there and hide. While the commentary about Sachin Tendulkar’s cricket continues to play on the radio, a couple of Kashmiri Muslim boys hit a Hindu young boy named Shiva (Prithviraj Sarnaik), asking him to shout ‘Pakistan Zindabad’. The 2-hr-50-min long film opens with kids playing in the freezing cold of Jan 1990. Unlike Vidhu Vinod Chopra’s – who’s himself a Kashmiri, Shikara, Agnihotri holds no qualms in showing the brutal but honest gut-wrenching tale. Many filmmakers have tried to tell us the story of the Kashmiri Pandits exodus, but none of them have been as accurate and close as Vivek Agnihotri. The Kashmir Files Movie Review ( Photo Credit – Still from The Kashmir Files ) The Kashmir Files Movie Review: Script Analysis Anupam Kher takes the gut-wrenching film on his shoulders and delivers it, successfully. ![]() The plot revolves around a JNU student Darshan Kumaar, who remembers nothing about his childhood. The Vivek Agnihotri directorial, The Kashmir Files is based on the real-life exodus and genocide of Kashmir Pandits that took place 32 years back. ![]()
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