Awarapan Review -
Ultimately, Awarapan is a film about the price of freedom. For Shivam, freedom is not escape, but confrontation. In its stunning, cathartic climax—set to a haunting rendition of the azaan (Islamic call to prayer) interwoven with the film’s score—Shivam does not ride off into the sunset. He walks, bloodied and broken, into the light of a mosque, finally allowing himself to feel the pain he has repressed for so long. His death is not a defeat; it is a homecoming. The wanderer stops wandering.
The narrative’s turning point is the arrival of Aaliyah (Shriya Saran), Malik’s wayward mistress. The don, in a fit of jealous rage, orders Shivam to keep her captive and ultimately kill her. But Aaliyah is no damsel in distress; she is a woman burning with a quiet, fierce faith. A Hindu who has secretly converted to Islam, she carries a music player with the recorded voice of her deceased Sufi mentor. Her devotion is not about dogma, but about love—a love so powerful it transcends religious boundaries and even death. awarapan review
At the film’s core is Shivam (Emraan Hashmi), a silent, sharp-suited enforcer for the Dubai-based don, Malik (Ashutosh Rana). The title Awarapan —meaning vagrancy or wandering—immediately establishes the protagonist’s spiritual state. He is a man who has lost his way, not geographically, but existentially. In a masterful economy of storytelling, the opening scenes show Shivam performing his duties with cold, mechanical efficiency. He tortures, he kills, he follows orders. There is no swagger, no sadistic glee—only the hollow ritual of a man who has numbed himself to feeling. His only companion is his own silence and the classic rock anthem “Toh Phir Aao,” whose yearning lyrics become the film’s leitmotif, a prayer for a self he has abandoned. Ultimately, Awarapan is a film about the price of freedom
What elevates Awarapan beyond a standard revenge drama is its aesthetic. Cinematographer Ravi Walia bathes the film in a palette of midnight blues, harsh neon, and the oppressive gold of Malik’s mansion. Dubai is not a tourist paradise but a soulless labyrinth of glass and steel, a perfect metaphor for Shivam’s internal state. The action sequences, choreographed by Abbas Ali Moghul, are not balletic but brutal, intimate, and shockingly abrupt. They have the weight of consequence; every bullet fired feels like a nail in someone’s coffin, including the shooter’s. He walks, bloodied and broken, into the light