Kho Gaye Hum Kahan Reviews: The Coming-of-digital-age story is pleasing the netizens, Check out these Reviews before watching the Movie

28 Dec, 2023
Instagram/Netflix.in Kho Gaye Hum Kahan Reviews: The Coming-of-digital-age story is pleasing the netizens, Check out these Reviews before watching the Movie

Kho Gaye Hum Kahan Reviews: Kho Gaye Hum Kahan is now #trending1 on Netflix.  If you still have not jumped on the bandwagon of watching citizen-acclaimed Kho Gaye Hum Kahan check out some of these reviews by the audience that might lend you help in navigating your Hamlet moment of to be or not to be, the decision of watching the movie.   

“Kho Gaye Hum Kahan deserves the hype The Archies Got”

Social media enthusiasts have took to X(formerly Twitter) platform to express their admiration, appreciation, and thoughts about the movies. The movie felt relatable and relevant to many, and the actors have gathered praise for their ability to portray the nuance of complexities experienced by their characters. Read up on what the audience has to say: 

Arjun Varrain’s Directorial Debut Resonates & Reflects 

‘Kho Gaye Hum Kahan’ is helmed by the debutant Arjun Varrain who has quite managed to lay a hand on a sore spot lying in the open, infectious to touch but in urgent need of addressal - the social media and its sweet perils. 

Starring Siddhant Chaturvedi as Imad, Ananya Pandey as Ahana Singh, and Adarsh Gaurav and Neil Pereria in the coming-of-digital-age Kho Gaye Hum Kahan is a direct, easy, relatable, and reflective take on the generation that lives, breathes and celebrates on social media.

The three friends have a self that is grinding and hustling to achieve their ambition, and seeking companionship in the real world, and another that they portray on their social media handles which is a momentarily solace from that real world where things are not always rose-tinted and perfectly poised. In one of the poignant scenes, the trio is inhabiting the same space physically but is occupied in relentless scrolling on their phone, sucking the joy and warmth of being around friends out of the moment. 

The movie did not aim to give a moral lecture about being a part of the stalker community that has become accustomed to ‘followings’ and ‘followers’ and has forgotten the world that lies beyond it. Nor does it blame any generation for what has become the reality of most people. Varrain simply tried to hold a mirror to its audience of their everyday ambitions and attempts to be ‘socially active’ to get validated, praised, and accepted. The Netflix original is lauded for its close-to-apt portrayal of the Genz.

Watch Kho Gaye Hum Kahan now streaming on Netflix.   

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