After making a huge splash at TIFF ’23, we get a new Trailer for KILL, in theatres July 4, 2024 via Cineplex Pictures.
Director: Nikhil Nagesh Bhat
Cast: Raghav Juyal, Lakshya, Tanya Maniktala, Harsh Chhaya, Ashish Vidyarthi, Abhishek Chauhan & Parth Tiwari
Story: When army commando Amrit (Lakshya) finds out his true love Tulika (Tanya Maniktala) is engaged against her will, he boards a New Delhi-bound train in a daring quest to derail the arranged marriage. But when a gang of knife-wielding thieves led by the ruthless Fani (Raghav Juyal) begin to terrorize innocent passengers on his train, Amrit takes them on himself in a death-defying kill-spree to save those around him — turning what should have been a typical commute into an adrenaline-fueled thrill ride.
About Cineplex Pictures
Cineplex Pictures, a division of Cineplex, is a distributor of a wide range of genre films. Recent titles include The Queen of My Dreams, Ordinary Angels, The Boy and the Heron, The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes, SAW X, EXPEND4BLES, Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret, John Wick: Chapter 4, Jesus Revolution, Hotel Artemis, and Dragon Ball Super: Super Hero.
By David Baldwin
Tulika (Tanya Maniktala) and Army Commando Amrit (Lakshya) are in love and plan to get married. The only problem is, Tulika is engaged to someone else and is on her way on the Rajdhani Express train to meet him in New Delhi. Amrit is on the train as well, as are a large number of bandits armed to the teeth with blades of all sizes. When the bandits start robbing the passengers and put Tulika in grave danger, Amrit and his commando friend Viresh spring into action.
KILL is fucking awesome. Period. There’s really no other succinct way to put it.
Writer/Director Nikhil Nagesh Bhat has crafted an edge of your seat Thriller that takes place almost entirely on a moving train and tells you very early on that it is not fucking around. If that was not enough to keep your blood pressure sky high, then the claustrophobic camera angles in the small train compartments and narrow hallways should do the trick. How Bhat was able to capture some of these incredibly-choreographed fight scenes is a minor mystery, with each one looking more intense than the last. The relentless barrage of bone-crushing, limb-snapping, brain splattering action scenes will not be for everyone – some moments are straight up the most vicious and graphically violent of the year, easily giving last year’s Midnight Madness fave Project Wolf Hunting a run for its money. For those who do revel in over-the-top gore and brutal fight scenes however, you need to put KILL at the top of your watchlist immediately.
Though some of the romance is ham-fisted and some of the familial bickering goes on too long, KILL is a blast from start to finish. Maniktala is great as Tulika, and Lakshya is terrific in his solemn, man of few words, star-making performance. He carries the movie with just his fierce eyes, his fighting stance and all the shocking things he does to the bodies of the bandits. Raghav Juyal does equally well as the villainous Fani, oozing charisma and swagger everywhere he goes. He is a wonderful foil for Lakshya’s Amrit and gets nearly all of the best lines.
Just make sure you KILL with a bunch of friends. Listening to the collective gasps, screams and clapping made for one of the best TIFF screening experiences ever.
KILL screens at TIFF ’23:
Friday, September 8 at 11:59 PM at Royal Alexandra Theatre
Saturday, September 9 at 9:10 PM at Scotiabank Theatre Toronto
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