Cannes 2025 Short Takes: 'Homebound' is A Stunning Portrait of Systemic Cruelty and Defiant Courage

The film is made with such precision, beauty, and emotion, built on strong writing (the screenplay is by Neeraj) and superb performances

Anupama Chopra
By Anupama Chopra
LAST UPDATED: SEP 22, 2025, 11:46 IST|5 min read
A still from 'Homebound'

The bonds between men constitute a sub-genre in Indian cinema. From Anand to Sholay to Dil Chahta Hai to Pyaar Ka Punchnama, these friendships have beguiled generations of viewers. It is fitting that in the 50th anniversary year of Sholay, comes the story of two young men whose story follows familiar beats — deep, abiding affection, a fracture in the friendship, tragedy. And yet, Neeraj Ghaywan’s Homebound is unlike most of these films that have gone before. Because the two men belong to marginalised communities; one is Muslim and the other Dalit. And because the story leads into the pandemic. By the end, I was a weeping mess.

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A still from 'Homebound'

There is such precision, beauty, and emotion here, built on strong writing (the screenplay is by Neeraj) and superb performances. Ishaan Khatter as Sohaib and Vishal Jethwa as Chandan shed their Bollywood baggage, as does Janhvi Kapoor. There is authenticity and the ability to deliver complex emotion. Ishaan, who started his career with Majid Majidi’s 2017 film Beyond the Clouds, returns to his roots. He is brilliant. The other standout is Shalini Vatsa, playing a mother felled by her circumstances.

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Sohaib and Chandan are ordinary men whose lives are marked by poverty, bigotry, and ultimately, disease. The film is based on Basharat Peer’s New York Times op-ed piece titled “A Friendship, a Pandemic and a Death Beside the Highway.” From that 2020 article, Neeraj has built out a narrative that hurls us, with both urgency and restraint, into the fault lines of our country. I couldn’t stop thinking about these two men and how their bond becomes a testament to humanity and compassion. A decade after Masaan premiered in Un Certain Regard at Cannes and went on to win the FIPRESCI Award and the Prix de l’Avenir award, Neeraj has created another emotionally resonant portrait of systemic cruelty and how ordinary men and women find the courage to defy it.

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