
Review
There's something darkly poetic about a film that punishes intellectual arrogance with such brutal finality. *Nagin* takes what could have been a simple creature-feature and transforms it into a meditation on consequence—Vijay's obsession to prove the unprovable becomes the catalyst for a tragedy that unfolds with genuine dread. Director Ritvik Bansal understands that the real horror isn't the supernatural shapeshifting; it's watching intelligent people make increasingly desperate choices as they realize their understanding of the world was dangerously incomplete. The performances carry this weight well, particularly in those moments where disbelief curdles into desperate terror. When Kiran's panicked gunshot echoes through the forest, you feel the precise moment innocence dies and retribution awakens.
What makes *Nagin* linger is how it refuses easy morality—the serpents aren't villains, they're victims of violation, and their revenge is heartbreaking rather than triumphant. Each hunt sequence is choreographed with unsettling intimacy, the shapeshifting creating genuine psychological dread as friends become untrustworthy. Rajesh's scene with his lover particularly cuts deep, blurring desire and danger in ways that feel uncomfortably real. However, the film occasionally stumbles in its middle sections, where exposition feels heavy-handed and the snake charmer subplot doesn't quite land with the weight it needs. The final act's bittersweet ending—that image of reunited spirit
Storyline
Vijay's obsession with proving that ancient Indian cobras can transform into humans is about to get deadly real! He drags his skeptical friends into the forest during a full moon to witness the mythical shapeshifters Nag and Nagin in action, convinced this will vindicate his wild research. But when the group actually finds these supernatural serpents, nobody's laughing anymore—they're face to face with genuine magic, and it's terrifying!
Everything goes catastrophically wrong when Kiran panics and shoots Nag, triggering the ultimate curse: a scorned Nagin unleashes an absolutely merciless vendetta! She systematically hunts down every member of the group, morphing into their loved ones to get close—she becomes Rajesh's girlfriend, a beautiful princess, anyone she needs to be. Even a powerful snake charmer's magical lockets prove useless against her fury; she's too clever, too vengeful, too unstoppable as she picks them off one by one.
Vijay watches his friends fall like dominoes, each death more horrifying than the last, until he's the only one standing! In the final confrontation, Nagin comes for him with everything she's got, but during their battle she plummets from a terrace and dies. It's bittersweet and haunting—the camera pulls back to show Nagin's spirit reuniting with Nag in the afterlife, a tragic reminder that Vijay's arrogance didn't just cost his friends their lives, it destroyed two ancient souls who were simply in love!