The Tashkent Files

Right to Truth

7.5
20192h 24m

The Tashkent Files is a thriller that revolves around the mysterious death of India's 2nd Prime Minister Shri Lal Bahadur Shastri and attempts to uncover if he had actually died a natural death, or, as alleged, was assassinated.

Cast

Photo of Naseeruddin Shah

Naseeruddin Shah

PKR Natrajan

Photo of Mithun Chakraborty

Mithun Chakraborty

Shyam Sunder Tripathi

Photo of Shweta Basu Prasad

Shweta Basu Prasad

Raagini Phule

Photo of Asif Basra

Asif Basra

News Channel Editor

Photo of Mandira Bedi

Mandira Bedi

Indira Joseph Roy

Photo of Pallavi Joshi

Pallavi Joshi

Aiysha Ali Shah

Photo of Rajesh Sharma

Rajesh Sharma

Omkar Kashyap

Photo of Pankaj Tripathi

Pankaj Tripathi

Gangaram Jha

Photo of Prakash Belawadi

Prakash Belawadi

GK Anantha Suresh

Photo of Achint Kaur

Achint Kaur

Mrs. Natarajan

Photo of Ankur Rathee

Ankur Rathee

Imran Qureshi

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Reviews

R

r96sk

8/10

Great film, probably the most I've enjoyed a Bollywood film so far.

'The Tashkent Files' isn't a typical Hindi film, at least compared to the ones I've watched thus far. It takes its time with the story and properly sifts through it, without any songs shoehorned in. I thoroughly felt entertained by it, despite a potentially damaging 144 minute run time.

There are some very good performances from the cast. Shweta Basu Prasad is no doubt the star, she puts a lot of emotion into the role of Raagini. Mithun Chakraborty is extremely likeable as Shyam, he keeps the film moving when the focus comes away from Prasad. Naseeruddin Shah is the most noteworthy of the rest, who are all pleasant to watch.

I had no knowledge of Lal Bahadur Shastri before this, so it was very interesting to learn bits and pieces about this period of India's history - even if it features disputed elements and the usual creative license that films use. I think they tell it very well, with/without the aforementioned.

I watched this on the UK's Zee Cinema channel, who broadcasted a version with a crap tonne of censorship over names, countries, organisations etc. It actually turned into an amusing little game to try and guess what was behind the blur!

In seriousness though, this is most definitely worth a watch.

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