Dacoit: A Love Story is now on Amazon Prime Video, and if you scrolled past it assuming it was just another South Indian action film with heist sequences and a running hero — slow down. There’s more happening here than the title or the poster suggests.
Directed by Shaneil Deo and starring Adivi Sesh and Mrunal Thakur, the film bills itself as a crime thriller with a love story at its center. That description is accurate, but it undersells the emotional weight the movie carries — particularly in its second half, where the romance stops being a backdrop and becomes the actual point.
A prison escape, a love story crushed by caste and betrayal, and Anurag Kashyap going completely unhinged as a cop. It’s not a perfect film. But it’s a genuinely good one, and it’s exactly the kind of watch that tends to get underappreciated when it arrives quietly on streaming without much fanfare.
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What’s Actually Going On in This Film
Haridas — Hari — is in prison for a murder he says he didn’t commit. He escapes. He gets pulled into a robbery. That’s the surface-level plot, and it’s competently executed.
But the real story is what happened before all of that. The flashbacks involving Hari and Saraswati — played by Mrunal Thakur — build a love story that’s been systematically broken apart by caste barriers, family pressure, and betrayal from people who were supposed to be trustworthy. By the time you understand what Hari actually lost and why he is where he is, the anger driving his choices makes complete sense.
That’s what separates Dacoit from a lot of action films. The violence has a reason. The revenge has a context. The heist sequences feel like they mean something rather than just being there to look cool — though, for the record, they do also look cool.
5 Reasons You Should Not Miss Dacoit on Prime Video
1. Adivi Sesh Is Doing the Best Work of His Career
This is a strong statement, but watching the film, it feels accurate. Sesh has built his reputation on intense thriller roles — Goodachari, Major — and Dacoit continues that run while asking more from him emotionally.
What he does here is hold two completely different versions of the same character in balance: the broken man who lost everything and the angry, driven man trying to take something back. Neither version cancels out the other. Both are visible in almost every scene. That’s not easy to pull off, and he pulls it off.

2. The Love Story Has Real Weight
Mrunal Thakur’s Saraswati could have been the standard “woman in the flashback who exists to motivate the hero.” She isn’t. The film gives her a proper arc, real stakes, and enough screen time for the audience to understand what this relationship actually was before everything fell apart.
The chemistry between Sesh and Thakur is quiet rather than electric, which suits the story. These are two people who loved each other genuinely in a world that kept making it impossible. The scenes between them — particularly the early ones before the story turns dark — have a warmth that makes the loss feel real when it comes.
3. Anurag Kashyap Is Having the Time of His Life
This might be the most unexpectedly enjoyable element of the entire film.
Kashyap plays an eccentric, unpredictable cop hunting Hari, and he has clearly decided to commit fully to every single second of screen time he has. The character is chaotic in a way that keeps you slightly off-balance every time he appears — you’re never quite sure what he’s going to do next, and that uncertainty is exactly what the role needs.
It’s the kind of supporting performance that can derail a film if it’s not calibrated correctly, but here it adds energy rather than distraction. Fans of morally complicated, borderline unhinged characters will enjoy every scene he’s in.
4. It Looks and Feels Like a Proper Cinema Film
Director Shaneil Deo clearly has a specific visual sensibility. The film uses shadow, quick cuts, and dark color grading to build a consistent atmosphere that matches the story’s mood. It doesn’t feel like a television production or a film that was shot to fill an OTT slot — it feels like something that was designed for a big screen.
The prison escape sequence is particularly well put together. The robbery scenes are tense in the right way — tight, fast, with just enough chaos to feel dangerous. The background score does its job without overpowering the emotional moments.

5. The Social Layer Underneath the Action
One of the things Dacoit does well — and doesn’t overstate, which is to its credit — is the exploration of caste as a structural force in the story rather than just a plot device. The barriers that destroyed Hari and Saraswati’s relationship aren’t villainous individuals making bad choices. They’re the weight of a social system being applied the way it usually is, quietly and with total confidence in its own authority.
That gives the film a layer of genuine anger underneath the stylish surface. It’s the kind of thing that makes you think slightly differently about the action sequences — because you understand what they’re really about.
Also Read: Lukkhe on Prime Video — Release Date, Cast, Plot and Everything You Need to Know
Language Options Make It Genuinely Accessible
Prime Video has released Dacoit in Telugu, Tamil, Kannada, and Malayalam, with the Hindi version expected to follow. If you’re a non-Telugu speaker who’s been waiting for the right moment to watch this, you don’t have to wait any longer.
The themes — love destroyed by social pressure, injustice, the difference between revenge and justice — travel well across languages. The emotional core of the film doesn’t require any cultural translation.
Also Read: Dacoit: A Love Story Movie Review – Adivi Sesh Delivers an Emotional Ride Worth Watching
The Honest Verdict
Dacoit isn’t going to reinvent Telugu cinema or leave you thinking about it for weeks. What it will do is give you two hours of genuinely good storytelling with performances worth paying attention to, action that serves the story, and an emotional backbone that most action films don’t bother to build.
For a weekend watch, that’s a high bar. Dacoit clears it comfortably.
Put it on. Let the first twenty minutes do their work. By the time the flashbacks kick in, and you start understanding what Hari actually lost, you’ll be in for the whole thing.


