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Atmaharaam Live — When the Hunt for Likes Becomes a Horror Story

Posted on November 29, 2025 By

Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], November 29: They say social media is the new graveyard of sanity. Atmaharaam Live doesn’t disagree — it laughs, then drags you into the mausoleum. The film, which was released on 28 November 2025, aims to blend horror with satire, comedy with digital obsession. But the ambition? That’s bigger than its courage.

In the eyes of its makers, Atmaharaam Live was meant to be a mirror held up to our times: where cultural superstition, digital fame-hunger, and mortal fear collide under flickering smartphone lights. In reality, it often feels like the mirror cracked mid-reflection.

The Premise: Likes, Spirits & a Very Bad Idea

Directed by newcomer Niharika Sahni, this film ventures where few mainstream Hindi horrors dare — social media horror. Its protagonist: Vithal Chadha (playing Vaid Sharma), a struggling content creator scroll-starved for views and validation. Together with his friend (played by Akashdeep Singh), he stumbles upon a macabre idea: video content filmed in a cremation ground, with spooky ambience and ghost stories — a potent recipe for clicks.

As the likes and follower count grow, so does something darker. When the supernatural begins seeping into his life, Vaid finds that online fame comes with chains. Ghosts aren’t just props, and horror isn’t a filter. The film attempts to clamp on the idea you already know: get rich on other people’s tragedy — and pay when real horror knocks.

It’s a concept that feels sharp, timely, and — on paper — chill-inducing. A horror-comedy wrapped in social commentary. But as many early reviewers point out, good intentions don’t always translate to good horror.

What Works — And Where the Hangover Begins

Fresh Idea, Brave Premise

In an era of safe horror remakes and formulaic scares, Atmaharaam Live tries something different. It doesn’t just use ghosts for cheap jump-scares — it weaponizes the modern obsession with social media. The underlying social satire about validation, voyeurism, and moral decay gives the film spine. Some critics and viewers say that’s exactly what made them sit up in the dark.

And the director’s courage to cast comparatively unknown faces — instead of big stars — means the fear doesn’t come wrapped in familiarity. When the ghost appears, you don’t see the actor. You see the fear. At least, that’s the promise.

Shooting for the Young, Digital Generation

The film speaks a language many understand: late-night live streams, followers count, viral fame — and the anxiety behind the perfect selfie. For younger audiences, this might hit harder than most horror flicks about haunted mansions or demonic cults. The horror is familiar. The fear is relatable.

Atmaharaam Live also offers a new path for fresh talent — a new direction, a new cast, and a new kind of story. In that sense, it’s less a film, more a statement: horror doesn’t need pocket-heavy star casts or borrowed scripts. It needs honesty, ambition — and maybe just a touch of dread.

The Brutal Truth: Where It All Falls Apart

Horror Without Horror — Poor Execution Drags the Idea Down

This is the tricky part: the film has a stellar skeleton, but a shaky spine. As one review put it bluntly: “The scariest thing here is the storytelling.”

And it’s hard to argue with that. The first act moves with some energy — establishment of characters, digital hustle, the hook. But once the horror begins, the film struggles: the scares don’t land, the tension never grips, and the horror tropes feel shallow. The spirits, the fear, the dread — they vanish behind bad timing, odd dialogues, and inconsistent tone.

Vithal Chadha, the lead, often feels unconvincing. Scenes that should tremble with fear end up limping with amateurism. Supporting actors try their best — Akashdeep’s comic timing gets a few laughs, Avyaana Sharma as the love interest tries to evoke pathos — but the skeleton of good horror remains bare.

When Satire Gets Lost in the Fog

The satire — the commentary on social media’s morbidity, fame from tragedy, and the morality of content creation — feels muffled. Rather than hitting hard, it floats as a whisper. By the time the film wants to scare you and then make you think, you’re already wondering if you should have just scrolled.

In modern horror, tone is everything. Mixing horror, comedy, and social critique demands precision. Atmaharaam Live aims for a cocktail, but ends up with a spill.

Box Office’s Cold Mirror

Despite the hype around a “fresh, young horror-comedy,” early word-of-mouth is lukewarm. The film’s acceptance depends heavily on the viewer’s tolerance for rough edges. As of now, there’s no public claim of box-office success or breakthrough, which suggests that this experiment might splutter before it flies.

In an age where audiences demand polish — especially in horror — rough execution is brutal. For many, the movie may end up as “just another small-scale horror.”

Why It Matters — And What Could Have Been

Even with its flaws, Atmaharaam Live deserves credit for one thing: ambition. The world doesn’t need another haunted house thriller. It needs horror that reflects today’s anxieties: instant fame, cheap virality, moral shortcuts, digital abandon. This film tries to catch that lightning.

For young filmmakers and indie creators, it’s a faint spark — not a blaze, but enough to remind us that horror doesn’t need cash. It needs guts. It needs ideas. And maybe, real fear.

If the makers had invested in better direction, sharper writing, stronger horror mechanics, this could’ve been a bold new voice in Indian horror — a post-internet horror that hurts, rattles, and perhaps even changes. As it stands, it’s more of a cautionary tale: good concept, poor follow-through.

PNN Entertainment

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