Trapped movie review: Rajkummar Rao film asks if you can starve to death in a Mumbai highrise?
What would you do if you are stuck in an empty high rise without food, water and electricity, your cellphone juiced out, no one in the know, and no way out? The premise of Trapped is instantly gripping. Being trapped, without a single vestige of hope or help, is one of our primal fears. And many brilliant films have been made on the subject: the one that has the maximum recall is Danny Boyle’s harrowing ‘127 Hours’, about a mountaineer trapped in a cave. The film is a testament to the indomitable human spirit and its incredible resistance to pain and fear and terror.Shaurya (Rajkummar Rao) gets inveigled into an unfinished apartment in an uninhabited building. The door, with the key on the wrong side, that slams on his face is also a shutter on his hopes of a future with the girl (Geetanjali Thapa) he has fallen for.
Rajkummar Rao may be trapped in a high rise in his latest movie, but he is definitely not going to get trapped in the stereotypes of Bollywood.
Rajkummar Rao on Trapped: 'One of my most challenging works to date'.
The movie is full boring not even one time watch. Very poor Direction and no story in the movie.
The movie is full of thrill it is an awesome movie made from low budget. Raj Kumar Rao has given his best performance until now in this movie.
Trapped movie review: Rajkummar Rao film asks if you can starve to death in a Mumbai highrise?
What would you do if you are stuck in an empty high rise without food, water and electricity, your cellphone juiced out, no one in the know, and no way out? The premise of Trapped is instantly gripping. Being trapped, without a single vestige of hope or help, is one of our primal fears. And many brilliant films have been made on the subject: the one that has the maximum recall is Danny Boyle’s harrowing ‘127 Hours’, about a mountaineer trapped in a cave. The film is a testament to the indomitable human spirit and its incredible resistance to pain and fear and terror.Shaurya (Rajkummar Rao) gets inveigled into an unfinished apartment in an uninhabited building. The door, with the key on the wrong side, that slams on his face is also a shutter on his hopes of a future with the girl (Geetanjali Thapa) he has fallen for.