
Hum Tum Aur Ghost
- Director
- Kabeer Kaushik
- Studio
- Shooting Star Films
- Release Date
- 25 March 2010
- Running Time
- 135 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹21.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹8.01 Cr
Review
"Hum Tum Aur Ghost" has an intriguing premise—a man discovering he can communicate with spirits—but squanders it with lazy storytelling and a protagonist so insufferably written that you'll wonder if the ghosts are the real victims here. The film can't decide whether it's a psychological thriller, a romance, or a supernatural comedy, so it limps along as none of the above. Armaan's character arc feels manufactured; his journey from skeptical to accepting his gift happens with all the conviction of a teenager shrugging through homework. The performances are competent enough—the leads have chemistry, sure—but they're fighting against a script that treats emotional stakes like optional plot elements rather than the backbone of compelling cinema.
Director's uninspired handling of the ghost sequences drains any genuine tension or wonder from what could've been unsettling encounters. Instead, we get saccharine redemption arcs for the spirits that feel recycled from a dozen better films. The editing is clumsy, pacing drags in the second half, and the "unexpected journey" promised in the synopsis amounts to little more than predictable sentiment wrapped in a London backdrop. For a film banking on supernatural intrigue, it's remarkably earthbound and forgettable—all style, no substance, and not even enough style to distract from the hollow core.
Rating: 4/10
Storyline
So basically, this guy Armaan is this super charming fashion photographer living the dream in London with his gorgeous girlfriend Gehna, who's this big-shot magazine editor. Everything seems amazing on the surface—great job, beautiful relationship, the works. But here's the catch: he's been dealing with this weird sleep problem that's actually something way more intense. Turns out he's hearing voices that nobody else can perceive, and it's driving him absolutely crazy.
Obviously, people around him think he's losing it. His girlfriend gets frustrated with his odd behavior, her dad keeps criticizing him for drinking too much, and nobody really gets what's happening. Things get pretty tense because he's literally having full conversations with people that don't exist in the normal sense. Eventually, Armaan realizes he's got this incredible but honestly kind of creepy ability—he can actually connect with ghosts and spirits who haven't moved on to the afterlife.
Once he figures out what's really going on, Armaan decides to use his unusual gift for something meaningful. He takes it upon himself to help out a couple of these trapped souls—including an elderly guy named Virender Kapoor and a young woman named Carol. This whole mission to help these spirits turns into this unexpected journey that changes everything for him in ways he never expected.




