In a cinematic landscape saturated with formulaic thrillers, Stolen emerges as a raw, unflinching examination of class privilege, mob violence, and human resilience in contemporary India. Directed by debutant Karan Tejpal and backed by powerhouse producers including Anurag Kashyap, Kiran Rao, Nikkhil Advani, and Vikramaditya Motwane, this Venice Film Festival selection transcends genre conventions to deliver a socially charged narrative that grips you from the first frame to the last.
Plot Summary: A Nightmare at the Rails
The film opens at a desolate railway station in Rajasthan, where two brothers—Gautam (Abhishek Banerjee), a privileged urbanite, and Raman (Shubham Vardhan), his more empathetic sibling—cross paths with Jhumpa (Mia Maelzer), a tribal laborer whose infant daughter is abducted while she sleeps. When Jhumpa briefly suspects Raman, the brothers are drawn into a harrowing search for the child. Their reluctant involvement spirals into a life-threatening ordeal after a viral video misidentifies them as kidnappers, triggering a vicious mob hunt. What unfolds is a 94-minute, breathless race against time that exposes India’s toxic social divides.
Themes and Social Commentary
- Class Privilege Undone: The brothers’ urban affluence crumbles in the face of rural mob justice. As Gautam realizes, “Privilege doesn’t insulate you from societal evils”.
- Mob Mentality & Misinformation: A chilling car-chase sequence forces viewers to confront how social media fuels violence.
- Systemic Apathy: Police incompetence and bias against the poor highlight institutional failures.
Performances: Raw and Unforgettable
- Abhishek Banerjee delivers a career-best performance, transforming from a cynical elitist to a vulnerable man stripped of his privilege. His panic is visceral, especially during a near-lynching scene .
- Mia Maelzer as Jhumpa is the film’s emotional anchor. Her “expressive eyes” convey terror and determination without melodrama.
- Shubham Vardhan balances the narrative as the moral compass, embodying empathy in a broken system.
Direction and Technical Brilliance
Karan Tejpal masterfully blends suspense with social critique:
- Cinematography (Isshaan Ghosh): Uses natural light and kinetic camerawork to create claustrophobic tension. The dusty railway station and chaotic chase sequences feel unnervingly real.
- Sound Design (Susmit Bob Nath): Minimal score amplifies ambient sounds—trains, mob chants, desperate breaths—making the terror palpable.
- Pacing: At 94 minutes, the film is taut, with “no unnecessary detours or flashbacks”.
Critical Reception
- ★★★★ from Firstpost, Koimoi, and India Today, praising its realism and performances .
- 3.5/5 from Times of India, noting slight repetitiveness in mob sequences .
- Festivals like Zurich and BFI London lauded its “unflinching look at India’s uglier aspects”.
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Final Verdict
Stolen is a “punch to the gut”—a thriller that uses relentless suspense to dissect social fractures. While its depiction of mob violence is brutal, a glimmer of human redemption lingers. Tejpal announces himself as a vital new voice in Indian cinema, and Banerjee cements his status as a character actor par excellence.
