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Movie Review The Bengal Files | ‘We’ The People Must Watch

Review of The Bengal Files (2025) – Vivek Agnihotri’s 3+ hour political drama on Bengal’s 1946 violence. A gripping, unsettling, and controversial film.

Movie: The Bengal Files
Director:
Vivek Ranjan Agnihotri
Cast: Mithun Chakraborty, Pallavi Joshi, Darshan Kumaar, Anupam Kher, Saswata Chatterjee, Namashi Chakraborty, Rajesh Khera, Puneet Issar, Priyanshu Chatterjee, Dibyendu Bhattacharya, Sourav Das, Mohan Kapur, Eklavya Sood, Anubha Arora, Palomi Ghosh, Simrat Kaur, Eklavya Sood, Mohan Kapur.
Theatrical Release Date:
September 5, 2025
Runtime:
3hrs 24mins

Writing about Vivek Ranjan Agnihotri’s The Bengal Files demands a degree of humility. I haven’t lived through the horrors of 1946 Bengal, nor do I carry survivors’ stories in my own family. My vantage is necessarily limited to what the film places before me—the choices of storytelling, performance, craft, and tone. On those terms, this is an unflinching, provocative work that revisits Direct Action Day in Calcutta and the Noakhali atrocities with a singular intent: to make audiences feel the violence and its aftershocks rather than merely know about them.

At 204 minutes, the film is a commitment. The sprawl feels both demanding and, in stretches, deserved for the scale of history it attempts to shoulder. I did wonder if it could have been trimmed—there are passages where intensity shades into excess—but the length also allows the narrative to breathe, to circle back, and to accrue weight scene by scene. Agnihotri interlaces the period reconstruction with a contemporary strand, using the present to refract the past, and vice versa. It’s a familiar device that sometimes overstates its point, yet it does add urgency to the film’s insistence that history isn’t past.

The film’s power often lies in its sound and words. There are lines that land with a crack—clap-worthy, even—because they compress rage, grief, and ideology into sharp, memorable phrasing. The background score oscillates from minimalist unease to full-throated thunder, generally carrying the scenes with it. When it swells, it does so to communicate, not merely decorate; when it recedes, it lets silence do the wounding. On the image side, the cinematography is frequently impressive: long, unbroken takes through chaos and crowd, well-choreographed, sustained at high pitch. VFX is used sparingly and, when it shows up, it doesn’t yank you out of the moment.

Agnihotri’s staging is deliberately confrontational. The film does not look away from gore; it rubs your face in it. The graphic tableaux are designed to sear, to insist that euphemism has no place here. Whether you read that as necessary realism or as a form of manipulation will depend on your tolerance for shock as a tool of remembrance. What’s undeniable is the cumulative effect: stretches of awe and dread that make you physically uneasy, the kind of sequences that leave you with goosebumps long after the cut to black.

Several moments crystallize the film’s political and moral stance. A brazen scene where an MLA slaps a CBI officer says more about the asserted rot in the system than any speech could—broad, unsubtle, effective. And then there’s a striking counterpoint to a famous Krantiveer moment: where Nana Patekar once taunted the idea of identifying blood as Hindu or Muslim, Mithun Chakraborty holds up threads of different faiths and asks if anyone can claim they belong to an Indian rather than to a Hindu or a Muslim. It’s one of the film’s rare gestures toward unity, and it resonates.

Performances serve the thesis with conviction. A veteran Mithun Chakraborty grounds his scenes with weary gravitas; Pallavi Joshi brings a steely clarity with make up that doesn’t look at all; Anupam Kher’s Gandhi is played with restrain but could have been way better in terms of the presentation. Yet the script they inhabit remains more instructive than investigative. The Bengal Files prefers moral certainty to ambiguity. It frames history in stark binaries—heroes, victims, villains—privileging one community’s suffering while leaving scant room for the messier stories of coexistence or dissent. The feature-film format, chosen for its capacity to move hearts, also streamlines complexity into vivid, forceful arcs.

For a viewer without first-hand memory, that is both compelling and troubling. The film claims fidelity to research and testimony, and much of what it depicts aligns with the brutality recorded in accounts of 1946 Bengal. But the dramatization’s urgency sometimes bulldozes nuance, turning reckoning into verdict. You feel guided—at times pushed—toward specific emotions and conclusions. That artistic choice gives the film its undeniable impact; it also narrows the space for viewers to sit with complications history rarely spares.

Ultimately, The Bengal Files is less a neutral lesson than a cinematic act of remembrance with unmistakable intent. It is long, loud in places, and often brutal—but rarely careless. Its dialogues sting, its score carries, its long takes impress, its VFX stays out of the way. It unsettles more than it entertains, and perhaps that is the point. Whether you see it as necessary courage or dangerous simplification will depend on what you ask of art: illumination through empathy, or mobilisation through certainty. From where I sit—as a critic responding to what unfolds on screen—it is a powerful, discomforting work that forces attention onto histories too often ignored, even as it leaves you wrestling with the cost of telling them this way.

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