
Logout
- Director
- Amit Golani
- Studio
- Viacom18 Studios
- Release Date
- 18 April 2025
- Running Time
- 108 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
Review
Babil Khan delivers a genuinely unsettling performance as a social media influencer consumed by paranoia in *Logout*, a thriller that recognizes the genuine horror lurking beneath our screen-addicted lives. The film's central premise—a man hunted through the digital infrastructure he once mastered—taps into real anxieties about cyberstalking, algorithmic manipulation, and the isolating trap of hyperconnectivity. Khan channels real obsessive intensity here, and when the film locks into its claustrophobic groove, you feel the suffocating weight of notifications turning menacing. The ambition is admirable, and the early stretches crackle with psychological tension that feels both timely and terrifying.
But ambition and execution are worlds apart, and *Logout* demonstrates this chasm with frustrating clarity. The screenplay is rife with convenient plot devices that snap the psychological thread at critical moments, while uneven pacing transforms what should be a relentless descent into something frustratingly slack. Rasika Dugal is criminally wasted in a supporting role that could've deepened the nightmare, and the director's tonal confusion—veering between psychological thriller and something else entirely—suggests a lack of clear vision. Technical problems compound the issue: dubbing feels disconnected, CGI work looks cheap, and the rushed climax abandons all the dread carefully constructed earlier for implausibility and melodrama. What remains is a half-baked commentary on di
Storyline
So basically, this movie follows this super popular influencer guy named Pratyush who's obsessed with hitting ten million followers. He's got this whole polished online persona that he presents to the world, and his sister keeps warning him that he's getting way too caught up in chasing likes and validation. But here's where things get wild—some obsessed fan steals his phone and pretends she's trying to help him get it back, which is totally creepy when you think about it.
Once Pratyush figures out she actually has his phone, he freaks out and wants to call the cops and make threats to get it back. But then something unexpected happens that totally changes his perspective on the whole situation. She posts something that exposes a huge lie he's been telling everyone online, and instead of destroying his reputation like he thought it would, the whole thing actually helps him gain more followers. It's kind of ironic and messed up at the same time.
Now things get really interesting because Pratyush realizes that having his phone stolen might actually be benefiting him in terms of his follower count. So he tells his manager to back off from involving the authorities because he doesn't want to risk this person deleting everything if she gets arrested. He starts investigating who this person really is, and she drops him a clue with her initials "SK." It becomes this whole cat-and-mouse game between them while he tries to figure out her real identity.