There are films that you walk into with cautious optimism, and Dacoit: A Love Story is exactly that kind of film. It carries the weight of big expectations — an emotional action drama promising love, loss, and the kind of gut-punch revenge story that Telugu cinema does so well. And honestly? It delivers on quite a few of those promises, even if it doesn’t quite stick the landing all the way through.
At the heart of the story is Haridas — Hari to the people who love him — a man who gives everything to the woman he adores, Saraswati. Their love feels real from the very beginning. You believe in it. Which is exactly why it hurts so much when things fall apart. Hari ends up behind bars, life moves on without him, and Saraswati — played by Mrunal Thakur — eventually finds another man and builds a new life. It’s the kind of quiet tragedy that doesn’t announce itself with dramatic music; it just settles in and stays there.
Then, years later, they cross paths again. And nothing is simple anymore.
The first half of the film does a beautiful job of drawing you into this world slowly. The romance between Hari and Saraswati feels lived-in and genuine, not manufactured for the screen. Adivi Sesh and Mrunal Thakur share a natural chemistry that makes you feel every moment of warmth — and every crack that forms afterward. Yes, the pacing dips in a few places where the film lingers a little too long on certain beats, but just when you’re starting to feel restless, the interval arrives. And it hits like a freight train. That one moment alone is worth sitting through the slower stretches to get to.
The second half shifts gears entirely. The romance takes a back seat and the film leans into darker territory — confrontations, secrets unraveling, and a revenge angle that keeps the tension alive. There’s a revelation near the climax that genuinely reframes everything you’ve watched up to that point, and those are the moments where Dacoit shows you what it’s truly capable of. The problem is that the writing doesn’t always match the ambition. Some scenes drag unnecessarily, and a tighter editorial hand could have shaved off a good twenty minutes without losing anything essential.
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But let’s talk about Adivi Sesh, because he is the reason this film works as well as it does. He doesn’t just play Hari — he inhabits him. His eyes carry the full weight of a man who loved deeply, lost badly, and is now navigating the wreckage of his own life. Even when the script lets him down, his performance never does. He holds the film together with raw, understated intensity, and it’s a reminder of why audiences keep coming back for him.
Mrunal Thakur matches him well. Saraswati is not a straightforward character — she’s caught between her past and her present, between what she once felt and the life she’s chosen to build. Thakur plays those contradictions with quiet conviction, and her scenes with Sesh have real emotional texture.
The supporting cast does the job without making a lasting impression. A few characters exist mostly to serve the plot rather than enrich it, which is a missed opportunity in a film so focused on personal relationships.
Director Shaneil Deo clearly has a strong grasp of action filmmaking. The fight sequences are dynamic and purposeful — they feel like extensions of character rather than spectacle for its own sake. The cinematography gives the film a gritty, grounded look that suits the emotional tone perfectly, and the background score knows when to step forward and when to stay out of the way.
The film’s biggest weakness is its writing. It leans on familiar clichés a few times too many, and certain emotional beats arrive so predictably that they lose some of their impact. For a story dealing with such complex feelings — love that curdles into pain, betrayal that reshapes identity — the screenplay occasionally settles for surface-level drama when it could have gone deeper.
Still, Dacoit: A Love Story is not a film you’ll regret watching. It has genuine heart, a lead performance that stays with you, and enough surprising moments to make the journey worthwhile. If you go in expecting a perfect, tight thriller, you might leave a little disappointed. But if you’re in the mood for a film that swings for real emotion and lands it more often than not, this one deserves your evening.
Adivi Sesh doesn’t let you look away. And sometimes, that’s enough.
Flickonclick Rating: 3/5 ⭐⭐⭐
Dacoit: A Love Story | Director: Shaneil Deo | Cast: Adivi Sesh, Mrunal Thakur | Genre: Action Drama
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