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welcome home (2020)

Two unsuspecting school teachers, Anuja (Kashmira Irani) and Neha (Swarda Thigle), who are on their way to the only house in a secluded village in Maharashtra, show up at the doorstep of a family comprising oddballs. Logically, the ladies should have just upped and left but they stay. What ensues hereon epitomises madness, menace and mayhem.

That both Neha and Anuja are rustic and refined – dressed in loose salwars with pleated dupattas covering their bosoms, oily hair pulled back in a tight ponytail and no make-up – has been established in their respective introductory scenes. Life in a staunch patriarchal household must have hardened them and turned these two young girls into docile individuals. We say this as that aspect of their personas surface when they bob without protest, sob under their breaths and take verbal thrashings from the male members of their respective families for wanting to hold on to their jobs or returning late from work. One day, the duo is sent to a long list of hamlets as census enumerators. On their way home, at a crucial junction, Neha reconfirms with Anuja if she still wants to go to that only house in a far-off village. The latter responds in positive. On reaching the somewhat deplorable building, the two exchange quick whispers about this family of four being ‘very, very odd’ and scoot. But a person’s initial demons are hard to get over, and the bruises on childlike Prerna (Tina Bhatia) reopen old wounds. After much cajoling, Neha gives in to Anuja’s demand: they are going back for a thorough inspection and rescue a heavily pregnant Prerna, who is also clearly combatting mental health issues. That family is sociopathy personified and the house, a house of terrors.

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welcome home (2020)

Two unsuspecting school teachers, Anuja (Kashmira Irani) and Neha (Swarda Thigle), who are on their way to the only house in a secluded village in Maharashtra, show up at the doorstep of a family comprising oddballs. Logically, the ladies should have just upped and left but they stay. What ensues hereon epitomises madness, menace and mayhem.

That both Neha and Anuja are rustic and refined – dressed in loose salwars with pleated dupattas covering their bosoms, oily hair pulled back in a tight ponytail and no make-up – has been established in their respective introductory scenes. Life in a staunch patriarchal household must have hardened them and turned these two young girls into docile individuals. We say this as that aspect of their personas surface when they bob without protest, sob under their breaths and take verbal thrashings from the male members of their respective families for wanting to hold on to their jobs or returning late from work. One day, the duo is sent to a long list of hamlets as census enumerators. On their way home, at a crucial junction, Neha reconfirms with Anuja if she still wants to go to that only house in a far-off village. The latter responds in positive. On reaching the somewhat deplorable building, the two exchange quick whispers about this family of four being ‘very, very odd’ and scoot. But a person’s initial demons are hard to get over, and the bruises on childlike Prerna (Tina Bhatia) reopen old wounds. After much cajoling, Neha gives in to Anuja’s demand: they are going back for a thorough inspection and rescue a heavily pregnant Prerna, who is also clearly combatting mental health issues. That family is sociopathy personified and the house, a house of terrors.

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7 10 35 1 critic 5 user
kashmira irani
swarda thigle
shashi bhushan
meghdeep bose
pushkar mahabal
crime
horror
drama

Welcome Home (2020)

Cast: Kashmira Irani
Directors: Pushkar Mahabal
User: 7/10 7%7%7%7%7%7%7%7%7%7%
Critic: 70 %
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