No Poster

Review

5.8/10Critic Score

Nasoor presents a morality tale wrapped in medical courtroom drama, yet struggles to elevate its familiar premise beyond textbook territory. The film's central conflict—a doctor forced to choose between professional ethics and political expediency—carries genuine weight, particularly in how it interrogates the commodification of healthcare in India's private sector. However, director Sarthak Dasgupta's execution feels somewhat pedestrian; the narrative beats are predictable, and the transformation of Sunil from profit-driven practitioner to idealist reads more as plot obligation than earned character arc. The performance work is competent rather than exceptional—there's conviction in the portrayal of moral compromise, but the emotional crescendos lack the nuance needed to truly resonate. The subplot involving Dr. Hira's cowardice functions as a convenient villain rather than a complex antagonist, which undermines the film's potential to explore the systemic pressures that corrupt medical professionals.

Where Nasoor finds its footing is in the courtroom sequences, where the screenplay finally sharpens its focus and delivers some genuinely compelling drama. The evidence-gathering portion and final legal confrontation demonstrate that the film understands how to construct tension when it concentrates its energy. The thematic parallel between Sunil's father's sacrifice and his own eventual awakening provides thematic coherence, even if the journey feels mapped out well in advanc

Rahul Mehta, Bollyhits ↗

Storyline

Sunil's a gynecologist running a swanky nursing home with his partner Dr. Hira, but here's the thing — he treats medicine like a business, not a calling, totally opposite to his idealistic father who went broke helping poor patients for nothing. His girlfriend Yashoda works in a government hospital and actually believes in serving people, which creates this simmering tension about what medicine should really be about. Everything's cruising along until Dr. Hira's negligence kills a patient, and instead of owning up, he fires the nurse to cover his tracks like a total coward.

Then Sunil operates on a minister's pregnant daughter-in-law and faces an impossible choice — save the mother or save the unborn child. He picks the mother, which is medically sound but politically catastrophic because the minister goes ballistic and drags Sunil to the medical council. Worst part? His own partner Dr. Hira stabs him in the back and sides with the minister, getting Sunil suspended and completely humiliated. It's a gut punch that leaves Sunil's career in ruins and his confidence shattered.

But here's where it gets brilliant — Sunil tracks down the nurse that Hira fired and discovers the real truth about that patient's death, getting the evidence he needs to blow the whole thing wide open in court. He absolutely demolishes Hira's lies and wins his case, clearing his name spectacularly! The experience transforms him completely, and he finally understands what his father knew all along — medicine is about healing people, not just making money. It's a perfect redemption arc that'll make you believe in integrity again.

View source ↗

Related Movies