6 – 5 = 2
- Director
- Bharat Jain
- Studio
- Bharat Jain
- Release Date
- 13 November 2014
- Running Time
- 103 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
Review
This found-footage thriller attempts to breathe life into a well-trodden subgenre by packaging a hiking expedition gone wrong through the lens of a handheld camera. The premise itself—six friends documenting their mountain adventure before encountering inexplicable horrors—echoes the DNA of films like *Blair Witch Project* and *As Above, So Below*, but execution here feels curiously hollow. The reliance on found-footage convention becomes the film's greatest weakness rather than its strength; too often, the camera work feels unmotivated, with characters conveniently filming during moments of panic or confusion. The gradual escalation of eerie events promises psychological unease but rarely delivers genuine dread, instead settling for jump-scare theatrics that the genre has exhausted. The ensemble cast, while competent enough, struggles to inject real vulnerability into dialogue that often feels written rather than lived.
What *does* work is the film's commitment to the mystery-through-tapes structure in its final act. There's an earnest attempt to make us piece together a narrative from fragmented recordings, which recalls the smarter aspects of films like *Searching* or *Unfriended*. However, the film undermines this potentially compelling framework by refusing to take real risks with its protagonists' fates or the nature of the threat itself. The pacing drags in the middle act, padding runtime with repetitive scenes of anxiety rather than building coherent narrat
Storyline
So basically, this movie is about a group of six buddies who decide to go on a hiking adventure in the mountains, but things take a pretty dark turn pretty quickly. What starts out as what should be an awesome trip becomes this nightmare scenario where they start experiencing some seriously weird and creepy stuff while they're up there. The whole thing gets increasingly unsettling as strange events keep happening to them.
The really clever part of the movie is that everything gets documented on a video camera that one of them is carrying around. So as events unfold, they're capturing all this bizarre stuff on tape, which becomes super important to the story later on.
What makes it particularly eerie is that we the audience end up watching these video recordings that were left behind by people who either died or vanished without a trace. It's like piecing together a mystery by watching these tapes and trying to figure out exactly what went down during that fateful trip. The whole found-footage style of storytelling makes it feel way more real and unsettling than if it were told normally.