Thamma

Review

5.5/10Critic Score

There's something bittersweet about watching a franchise stumble just when momentum seemed within reach. *Thamma* arrives equipped with all the visual polish and musical appeal one expects from the Maddock universe—the production values are undeniably sleek, and the brand recognition carries considerable weight. Yet the film struggles with fundamental tonal balance. The horror-comedy formula feels uncertain, with comedic timing that lacks the precision audiences have grown accustomed to, while the script meanders between genuine moments of warmth and passages that simply drift without purpose. Most critically, the vampire mythology at the heart of the narrative feels underexplored; the filmmakers appear reluctant to fully commit to either genuine scares or genuine laughs, resulting in a film that hedges its bets rather than doubling down on its genre foundations.

What prevents *Thamma* from complete irrelevance is its technical competence and the committed performances anchoring it. The cinematography crackles with color and invention, the soundtrack carries weight, and there's an undeniable earnestness in trying to marry emotional substance with entertainment. In fleeting moments, you sense the bolder film trapped within—one that might have truly challenged genre conventions rather than merely following them. The climax, however, disappoints by playing it safe when audacity was needed most. For all its missteps, the film remains intermittently engaging and keeps the larger

Rahul Mehta, Bollyhits ↗

Storyline

So there's this journalist guy named Alok who's basically a total failure at his job. He tries to pull off this fake demon stunt to make headlines, but it completely blows up in his face and he becomes an internet laughingstock instead. He's desperate to show everyone he's got guts, so during a camping trip with friends, he decides to go off the beaten path and immediately runs into a bear! Just when things look really bad, this mysterious woman named Tadaka shows up and saves him from becoming bear food.

Once Alok recovers at Tadaka's place—which is actually an old abandoned plane in the jungle—he becomes totally fascinated by her. She's gorgeous and strong and takes care of him, but there's definitely something weird about her. Like, she eats raw meat, has superhuman strength, and won't eat regular food herself. He finds all of this pretty strange but tries not to think too much about it. She keeps warning him not to wander into the jungle at night alone, but he doesn't really listen to her.

One night Tadaka sneaks off, and of course Alok follows her into the jungle despite everything she told him. He gets caught by some mysterious men and knocked out, then gets dragged to this hidden village. When he wakes up, he discovers that Tadaka isn't just some random forest girl—she's connected to something much bigger and stranger than he ever imagined. Things get really complicated from there as everyone tries to figure out what happens next!

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