Shaitan. Movie 【Pro ⚡】

The stunning performances, the groundbreaking soundtrack, the unflinching climax, and the chilling reminder that sometimes the devil isn’t in the details—he’s sitting right next to you, bored at a party.

The title Shaitan (devil) is deliberately ambiguous. Is it the system? The corrupt cop, Arvind (a terrifyingly controlled Rajat B Kapoor), who tortures confessions? Or is it the parents—the neglectful, absentee rich who fuel their children’s nihilism? The film’s boldest answer lies in the protagonists themselves. These aren’t sympathetic antiheroes; they are deeply flawed, often unlikable, and utterly believable. Kalki Koechlin delivers a career-defining performance as Amy—manic, fragile, and capable of chilling manipulation. Rajkummar Rao, in a small but unforgettable role, brings tragic vulnerability to a character who is the group’s conscience and its victim. shaitan. movie

The film refuses to moralize. It doesn’t say, “Rich kids are bad.” Instead, it asks: When you have no limits, no consequences, and no real human connection, what’s left? The answer, the film suggests, is a vacuum that evil rushes to fill. The corrupt cop, Arvind (a terrifyingly controlled Rajat