
Interrogation
- Director
- Ajoy Varma Raja
- Studio
- Aryan Brothers Entertainment Film, Naam Mein Kya Rakha Hai Production
- Release Date
- 30 May 2025
- Running Time
- 95 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
Review
"Interrogation" arrives as a competent chamber mystery that leans heavily on the interrogation room drama—a format popularized in Hindi cinema by films like "Mulk" and "Article 15," though this one operates on a more intimate, whodunit scale. The film's greatest strength lies in its willingness to unpeel layers methodically; each interrogation scene functions as a self-contained act that recontextualizes what we thought we knew about the central murder. The detective's persistent questioning creates a claustrophobic pressure cooker, and when done right, these sequences generate genuine intrigue. However, the execution occasionally falters—the pacing drags in the second act as revelations feel more mechanical than organic, and the performances, while earnest, don't always transcend the procedural framework they're trapped within.
What undermines "Interrogation" most is its reliance on plot twists for momentum rather than character depth or thematic resonance. Unlike "Badhaai Ho" or "Andhadhun," which used their mysteries to explore something meaningful about human nature, this film treats revelations as mere puzzle pieces to be shuffled. The writing becomes increasingly convoluted as it chases shock value, and by the third act, the "surprise turns" feel more arbitrary than earned. The direction is serviceable but uninspired—there's little visual language to elevate the inherently static interrogation scenes, no stylistic flourish that transforms a predictable format
Storyline
So basically, this retired judge turns up dead at his place, and right away the police are all over it. They round up four people who were actually with him on the day he died, and a detective starts grilling each of them to figure out what went down. It's got that classic whodunit vibe where everyone's a suspect.
As the questioning goes deeper, all these hidden secrets start coming out about the judge and his relationships with these four people. Each interrogation peels back another layer, and you realize there's way more going on beneath the surface than anyone initially thought. The tension just keeps building as new information keeps surfacing.
Without giving anything away, the whole thing takes some really surprising turns that you probably won't see coming. There are plenty of plot twists that make you question what you thought you knew, and the mystery keeps you guessing right up until the very end. It's definitely one of those films that makes you want to piece together all the clues yourself.