Ankur Arora Murder Case Movie Reviews
4.0
Martin D'Souza | Glamsham
How many people are out there wondering what went wrong with their dear ones who went in for a routine surgery but ended in the grave? Or even patients who have been wheeled into the ICU for nothing and come out dead. There are stories aplenty. I'm sure every third person has one. You've got to watch this. ANKUR ARORA MURDER CASE is not only gripping; it's also thought-provoking and path-breaking. The movie throws light on the medical professionRead full review4.0
IANS | Zee News
This is is a far cleverer, wiser and relevant film than most of what we get to see these days. At a time when Bollywood is raining bubbles, this sobering clenched disturbing medical thriller comes as an invigorating cloudburst.Read full review3.5
Meena Iyer | Times of India
Suhail Tatari's Ankur Arora Murder Case is a medical drama which should be given its due because it is in the real space as compared to the usual fluff that Bollywood churns out week on week. The film revolves around Dr Asthana ( Kay Kay Menon) a surgeon put on a pedestal because of the number of high-profile lives he has saved. Cocky Asthana rules Shekawat General Hospital with an iron hand. Things are going real smooth for the star surgeonRead full review3.0
Taran Adarsh | bollywoodhungama.com
The medical profession is often referred to as the noblest line of work. But we often hear/read about unscrupulous practices that bring disrepute and disgrace to this dignified vocation. It's often said that the underprivileged or poverty-stricken are most affected by medical malpractices or laxity, but I don't concur with this stance entirely. It affects the upper crust too. Goof ups by health centers or inside the operation theatresRead full review3.0
Joginder Tuteja | rediff.com
Cases of medical negligence make fairly common news. While we tolerate the even more common news of scams and corruption, cases of medical negligence are harder to accept because a person can lose his or her life as a result of wrong diagnosis, prescription or sheer apathy. In Ankur Arora Murder Case, over-confidence of the doctor is the culprit. This is not a Satyameva Jayate type of offering and director Suhail Tatari isn't tugging your heart stringsRead full review3.0
Gaurav Malani | Indiatimes
This is a film where the first half is largely set on the backdrop of a hospital, while the second half is a courtroom drama. A hospital and a court of law are two places that any average human would like to keep safe distance from, unless unavoidable. So while this might seem like a depressing setup for a film, Ankur Arora Murder Case essentially is an important cinema that dares to go into unpleasant and uncharted territory and emphasize onRead full review3.0
Joginder Tuteja | Rediff
This is not a Satyameva Jayate and director Suhail Tatari isn’t tugging your heart strings a la Aamir Khan. The intention is to highlight a different theme while ensuring that the narrative doesn’t get into the art house zone.Read full review3.0
Gaurav Malani | Times of India
Ankur Arora Murder Case is a film that will scare you and make you squirm in your seats. It makes a significant statement that no life is less significant!Read full review2.5
Saibal Chatterjee | NDTV
It is a well-meaning, proficiently crafted and competently acted drama about the wages of medical skullduggery. But Ankur Arora Murder Case fails to make a strong enough case for itself.Read full review2.5
Karan Anshuman | Mumbai Mirror
Ankur Arora has an important point to make and a scary reality to represent. Often we equate doctors with god-like reverence, but occasionally they might mistakenly believe that they are, indeed, godRead full review2.0
Tushar Joshi | DNA India
The film begins as a medical drama that involves a young boy Ankur Arora (Vishesh Tiwari) losing his life on the operation table due to negligence at the hands of a renowned surgeon Dr Asthana (Menon). It chronicles his mothers (Tisca) battle to get justice and battle the corrupt system to set the wrong right and make sure there are no more such accidental deaths. Despite being a court room drama it lacks the finesseRead full review2.0
Shubhra Gupta | Indian Express
The film intends to be part hospital procedural, part courtroom drama, with a dash of chase-and-hunt thriller, all very Robin Cook-ish. But it never really gets there.Read full review2.0
Shakti Shetty | Mid Day
The whole effort leaves one asking for more because it lacks finesse. Sloppy editing coupled with soulless dialogues and unneeded adherence to clichés play spoilsport.Read full review1.5
Mohar Basu | Koimoi
Ankur Arora Murder Case Review | Rating: 1.5/5 stars | Watch or Not?: I would recommend you to watch Aamir Khan’...Read full reviewNR
MTV Editor | MTV India
“Ankur Arora Murder Case” is one of the most gripping moral dramas in recent times. The deftly crafted script raises the question of right and wrong in the medical profession without getting preachy or hysterical.Read full review