'Khufiya' movie review: A pulpy spy-thriller that sometimes runs out of juice

As per the disclaimer in the beginning, Khufiya is a “fictional account of events, loosely based on the book Escape To Nowhere.”
Poster from the movie Khufiya. (File Photo)
Poster from the movie Khufiya. (File Photo)

A single detail can make a film. In Vishal Bhardwaj’s latest Khufiya, the members of the R&AW, the ‘spies’, before leaning in to share sensitive information, look out for the nearest noise emitter and, when found, dial-up its volume. It can be a car stereo diffusing a romantic ballad or a home radio clearing into a classic. As a viewer, you also listen closely, like a surveillant these secret agents are guarding themselves against. It feels interactive, furtive, and voyeuristic. In another amusing scene, a character desperately looks around the room when her associate starts talking about some ‘top secrets’. She finds an open tap and revs up its flow, only to be reprimanded for wasting water. Witty.

As per the disclaimer in the beginning, Khufiya is a “fictional account of events, loosely based on the book Escape To Nowhere.” That’s actually an apt description because if you have read the book, although intricately detailed, it does feel like a 350-page minutes of an R&AW meeting. Bhardwaj brings in the fictional bits. Firstly, the protagonist Krishna Mehra (KM), who is a man in the book, is written as a female character (How would one cast Tabu then?).

KM also gets an elongated arc. She isn’t just a straight-arrow officer desperate to bring a traitor to justice, she is also avenging her lover’s death. The rest is more or less similar. Ravi Mohan (Ali Fazal) is an officer who is living beyond his means and soon gets on the radar of R&AW’s Counter Espionage Unit (CEU). They bug his office to find that he has been photocopying top-secret files and selling them to a foreign agency for kickbacks. At first, this felt like a lazy plot point, almost fatuous. A secret agent’s secret activity is clandestinely taking…photocopies. But, believe it or not, that’s what the real Ravi Mohan did. Truth indeed is stranger.

The fun begins when the agents fix surveillance cameras in the suspect’s house. The listening-in happens in a secret lair behind a milk kiosk. There is something Indian, particularly Delhi, in prying into neighbours’ lives from a Mother Dairy. The bits where Wamiqa Gabbi as Charu, Ravi’s wife, gets high, dances and emotes on old Bollywood numbers, as if she is performing for an invisible camera (spoiler: She is) are endearing. They also serve as a showcase of Wamiqa’s assorted talents.

Stating that Tabu was great in a film is an understatement. It also runs the risk of being labelled a cliché. Let’s just say that her musingly smoking in a darkened room or merely peeping out of a van’s window, as pigeons flutter outside, turns frames into paintings. Ali serves a delicious nervousness as he plays Ravi. While talking, he seems to eat his words and walks with a jitter, which I once confused for a limp. More than his dialogues, his body language emits the fear of a man who constantly has to look over his shoulder. 

Once out of Delhi and in the US, Khufiya feels uprooted. It strangely morphs into the genre it was avoiding in the first half: the global spy film. The pacing dwindles and you can either predict what happens next or don’t care to. For a thriller, I don’t know which is worse. There is also too long of a dinner scene which begs to be taken more tensely than it actually is. It all ends crudely with a character being slammed against a wall, and another’s throat gashed. One genre at a time, probably.

Khufiya

Cast: Tabu, Ali Fazal, Wamiqa Gabbi, Ashish Vidyarthi, Navnindra Behl
Director: Vishal Bhardwaj

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