Kadakh
Starts
As
Comedy
Turn
Out
To
Be
A
Drama
At
first,
Kadakh
reminded
me
a
lot
of
Kevin
Hart
and
Adam
Sandler
kinda
early
2000s
comedy
films.
However,
after
a
comic
start,
the
film
dives
into
drama
and
looses
its
comic
touch
only
to
mere
eye
moments,
when
more
members
arrive,
or
people
get
too
close
to
the
body.
The
party
continues
to
go
on
for
the
longest
time
and
even
Sunil
and
Malti
don't
seem
too
bothered
for
a
while.
Plot
Takes
Several
Detours
But
Cast
Keeps
You
Engaged
The
film's
undertone
gives
a
gilmpse
of
'karma' and
'what
goes
around,
comes
around'
but
no
one
pays
the
price.
The
storyline,
though
interesting,
the
screenplay
takes
out
all
the
fun
with
too
many
characters
that
turn
out
to
be
too
many
distractions.
In
95
minutes,
majority
of
the
time,
we
end
up
chasing
characters
as
they
push
their
stories
and
agenda
on
each
other,
rather
than
finding
out
what
happens
next.
A
film
with
limited
exposure
and
a
one-liner
plot,
is
expected
to
keep
the
story
intact
with
a
strong
screenplay,
but
here,
the
film
has
a
hard
time
finding
out
the
genre
it
belongs
to.
While
we
start
with
a
comedy
thriller,
the
story
quickly
takes
a
dramatic
turn
and
divulges
into
the
broken
marriage
and
ruined
friendships,
society
expectations,
etc.
Kadakh
Is
Available
To
Stream
On
SonyLIV
Director
Rajat
Kapoor
brings
in
a
large
sum
of
talented
actors
who
play
their
part
well,
but
end
up
too
noisy
when
put
together,
adding
to
the
chaotic
feel
of
the
film.
What
shocks
you
the
most
is
when
nobody
shields
two
kids
from
seeing
the
dead
body
or
talking
about
it,
instead,
the
final
solution
is
given
by
one
of
the
kids.
Overall, Kadakh gets
you
hooked
in
the
first
10
minutes
to
make
it
through
the
film,
but
it
leaves
you
with
a
lot
of
unanswered
questions
that
will
steal
you
of
the
minimal
fun
moments.