
Kasam
- Director
- Shibu Mitra
- Release Date
- 2 October 2001
- Budget
- ₹1.70 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹2.30 Cr
Review
There's an admirable clarity of purpose in this revenge drama that unfolds with genuine narrative momentum. The premise of three men from disparate backgrounds—a grieving truck driver, an incorruptible cop, and a reformed convict—joining forces against a brutal bandit chief has the makings of a compelling character study wrapped in an action film. The director understands the value of chemistry, and it shows; the camaraderie between Shankar, Mangal, and Vijay feels earned rather than manufactured, giving us reason to care about their mission beyond the surface-level vengeance plot. The first half moves with purpose, building tension methodically rather than through manufactured melodrama, which is refreshing in an industry often guilty of excess.
Where the film stumbles is in its middle passages, where the kidnapping subplot, while raising stakes theoretically, introduces contrivance where we'd hoped for organic escalation. The negotiations feel obligatory rather than inevitable, and some supporting characters blur into anonymity when they should anchor the emotional core. Yet to the director's credit, the climactic sequences reclaim the film's identity—the action choreography is inventive, the twists land with genuine surprise, and there's a satisfying catharsis in how Shankar's quiet rage finally erupts into justified violence.
This is solid mid-tier Bollywood filmmaking. It knows its strengths and mostly stays within them, delivering an entertaining revenge narrative wit
Storyline
Shankar's burning with vengeance after his father gets killed by the ruthless bandit Kala Daku, so he ropes in two unlikely allies—a straight-arrow police inspector named Mangal and a charming escaped convict called Vijay. While Shankar keeps a low profile driving trucks, Vijay and Mangal play the heroic protectors, earning the village's trust as they secretly prepare to take down Kala's vicious gang. It's a clever setup with real chemistry between the three, and you're instantly hooked wondering how this ragtag team will pull off their dangerous gambit.
Everything goes sideways when Kala's men kidnap Vijay right out from under them! Now Mangal and the entire police force are scrambling, forced into tense negotiations with Kala, trying to trade the landlord's son just to get Vijay back alive. The stakes skyrocket and you're on the edge of your seat because suddenly these guys aren't in control anymore—they're playing a deadly game where one wrong move could cost them everything.
Shankar finally makes his explosive move against Kala and his crew, unleashing the revenge he's been plotting all along with jaw-dropping intensity and style! The climax absolutely delivers—you get thrilling action sequences, clever twists, and real emotional payoff as justice comes crashing down on the villains. It's a satisfying finish that earned every bit of your investment in these three heroes!




