Starring: Bonny Sengupta, Amrita, Saurav Das & More
Directed by: Anthony Jane
Rating:
Storyline
At the center of Jhor is Michael, a suspended officer who is tasked with finding two missing girls after his student Jane is mysteriously injured. What could have been a gripping investigation soon falls into chaos. Instead of building tension, the story feels vague and confusing. The screenplay is poorly structured, with missing links and forced twists.

Direction & Screenplay
Director Anthony Jane struggles to bring clarity and pace to the film. The storytelling feels sloppy, the screenplay is half-baked, and scenes are unnecessarily stretched. A thriller needs sharp editing and gripping suspense, but Jhor fails to deliver either. The film leaves audiences confused rather than intrigued.
Performances
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Bonny Sengupta: Strangely absent for most of the first half. His performance in the latter half feels unconvincing and disconnected.
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Amrita: A big zero in acting.She delivers no expressions, no depth, and no screen presence. Her performance completely lacks emotional range and chemistry with Bonny. The casting feels mismatched and forced, further weakening the film.h Bonny is weak, and her casting looks mismatched as she appears older than the male lead.
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Saurav Das: Known for strong performances in web series and films, Saurav is wasted here. His role adds no real value.
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Supporting Cast: Poorly utilized and easily forgettable.
Music & Technical Aspects
One of the biggest drawbacks of Jhor is its unnecessary songs that add no value to the story. The background score lacks intensity, cinematography is average, and editing is inconsistent. Instead of supporting the thriller mood, the technical aspects make it feel dull and disconnected.
Why Jhor Fails
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Weak Script & Vague Storytelling
The core idea of Jhor had potential, but the writing is lazy and confusing. Instead of building a gripping thriller, the story feels half-baked and directionless. -
Poor Direction
Director Anthony Jane fails to create suspense or emotional depth. Scenes are stitched together without logic, pacing is uneven, and the film lacks any thrilling edge. -
Disappointing Performances
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Bonny Sengupta delivers one of his weakest performances, missing from much of the first half and flat when present.
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Amrita is a big zero in acting—with no expression, no chemistry, and no screen presence.
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Saurav Das is wasted, with his talent completely unused.
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Awkward Casting & Chemistry
The pairing of Bonny and Amrita feels mismatched. Amrita appears older, making the romantic angle awkward and unconvincing. -
Unnecessary Songs
Random songs break the already weak narrative flow, killing any tension the film tries to build. -
Technical Failures
The background score lacks intensity, cinematography is flat, and editing is inconsistent. Technically, the film looks outdated. -
No Entertainment Value
A thriller should keep audiences on edge, but Jhor is boring, predictable, and frustrating—making it one of the worst Bengali films in recent memory.
Verdict
Jhor had the potential to be a gripping Bengali thriller, but it ends up as one of the worst films in Bengali cinema in 2025. From story to acting to direction, everything feels poorly done.
👉 Final Rating: 1/5 stars – A complete disaster.
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