Movie — Siddharth
Siddharth is not entertainment. It is a necessary, heartbreaking prayer. Bring tissues. Bring patience. And above all, bring your conscience.
But when the train arrives, Siddharth does not get off. He simply vanishes. siddharth movie
What follows is not a high-octane rescue mission. Instead, Mehta gives us a slow-burn odyssey. Mehendi, armed with a photograph and a fading hope, crisscrosses the subcontinent, navigating indifferent bureaucrats, corrupt police officers, and an underworld of child labor. His wife (played by Tannishtha Chatterjee) waits at home, her silence more powerful than any scream. At its core, Siddharth is a masterclass in social realism. The film refuses the easy catharsis of a Bollywood reunion. It forces the audience to sit with the uncomfortable reality of India's missing children—a crisis where a child goes missing every eight minutes, according to some reports, most of whom are never found. Siddharth is not entertainment