Ajmer 92

Ajmer 92

Below Average
Director
Pushpendra Singh
Studio
U&K Films EntertainmentSumit Motion PicturesUK Films Entertainment
Release Date
20 July 2023
Running Time
141 min
Language
Hindi
Country
India
Budget
8.00 Cr
Box Office
1.00 Cr

Cast

Review

5.8/10Critic Score

Ajmer 92 attempts to confront a genuinely dark chapter of Indian history—a true crime narrative of systemic abuse enabled by wealth and influence in a small town. Director Rajesh Mapuskar approaches the material with deliberate restraint rather than sensationalism, which serves the gravity of the subject matter. The performances, particularly the cold calculation of the perpetrators, carry conviction, and there are moments where the film's refusal to look away from institutional complicity feels morally necessary. However, the film struggles with its own ambitions; the narrative occasionally tilts toward exploitation even while condemning it, and the pacing in the second half becomes repetitive, diluting impact through accumulation rather than deepening our understanding of the victims' experiences.

What works most powerfully is the film's portrait of a community's paralysis—how ordinary people's silence becomes its own crime. Yet this thematic strength isn't matched by character development; most figures remain sketches rather than fully realized people, which limits emotional resonance beyond surface-level shock value. The blackmail angle, presented as central, could have been explored with greater psychological depth instead of serving mainly as plot machinery. For all its serious intentions, Ajmer 92 feels like a worthwhile but uneven attempt—worthy of engagement despite its flaws, because such stories demand witness, but ultimately constrained by its own narrative choic

Vikram Bose, Bollyhits ↗

Storyline

I just watched this absolutely gut-wrenching film about a dark chapter in Indian history. It's set in Ajmer during the early 90s and chronicles how a bunch of powerful guys from a well-connected family basically terrorized young women in their community for years. The ringleaders are these two brothers who used their family's influence to get away with horrific crimes, and what makes it even more disturbing is that they targeted girls of all ages, including children. The whole thing is absolutely sickening.

What gets to you most is how these predators operated so openly and for so long without facing real consequences. They weren't just committing these terrible acts—they were actively blackmailing their victims, which means there was this added layer of psychological torture on top of everything else. The film doesn't shy away from showing how ordinary people in the town were aware of what was happening but either couldn't or wouldn't do anything to stop it.

The fact that this is all based on actual events that supposedly ended around 1992 makes watching it even heavier. You sit there thinking about how many similar stories probably went untold, and how many women suffered in silence because nobody powerful enough cared enough to intervene. It's the kind of film that stays with you and makes you angry at a system that allowed this to happen.

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