What Is the Story About?
Stolen is less a thriller and more a slow-burn societal gut punch.
The plot begins without wasting any time as Gautam (Abhishek Banerjee) arrives to pick up his younger brother Raman (Shubham Vardhan), and before the two can even settle into their journey to attend their mother’s wedding, chaos strikes. A woman’s infant goes missing. She points at Raman. He saw someone flee with a baby, but now he’s in the eye of a storm he barely understands. The police get involved, a video goes viral, and suddenly, two brothers are labelled “Bachcha Chor” by an online mob with more outrage than facts.
But Stolen isn’t chasing plot twists. It’s chasing something far more unsettling: the thin line between being a bystander and being burnt at the stake.
Abhishek Banerjee is pitch-perfect as the pragmatic elder brother who is privileged and indifferent until his comfort zone is bulldozed. Vardhan’s Raman, meanwhile, plays the idealist, still naive enough to believe that helping others is enough to keep you safe.
So, the two brothers begin their journey of finding the missing infant. It is a day’s event that changes from wedding to something entirely else.
Performances?
The heart of Stolen is in its performances and that’s where the film stuns you.
Abhishek Banerjee leads with a performance that’s powerful without ever being loud. He plays Gautam, a man who’s used to staying out of trouble, keeping things simple, and believing money can fix most problems. But as the story spirals into chaos, we see his layers peel back. Banerjee doesn’t play Gautam like a hero or a villain but like someone we’ve all been at some point.
Then there’s Mia Maelzer, who plays Jhumpa, the mother of the missing child. She’s the emotional anchor of the film. She doesn’t rely on big dramatic scenes. Instead, she shows pain in the way she holds her body, the panic in her eyes. You believe every second of what she’s going through, and it is the most uncomfortable part of the film.
Shubham Vardhan, as Raman, is the calm opposite of Gautam. He’s kind, thoughtful, and driven by a strong sense of right and wrong. Vardhan plays him with a quiet strength that balances the film. His sincerity gives the story its emotional weight, and his chemistry with Banerjee feels honest and lived-in.
Even the supporting actors Harish Khanna and Shahidur Rahman bring depth to their roles. No one feels out of place. Everyone feels like they belong in this messy, frightening world.
Analysis
As you are reading this review, you have a fair idea of what the story is all about.
Does it remind you of something?
Yes, we know.
Anushka Sharma’s NH 10. That underdog from 2015 that was ignored on the big screens but later became such a conversation starter. Stolen has many elements similar to that film.
But the soul is entirely different. NH 10 is more of an adventure tale where a couple grapples with external monsters and their internal emotions.
Stolen on the other hand is Freud’s Id and Superego put to a test. The movie has two brothers representing the two traits and how they react becomes super exciting.
Stolen is the kind of film that quietly crawls under your skin. At its heart, it’s a survival thriller, but one that dares to hold up a mirror to the audience. It asks uncomfortable questions, and refuses to answer them for you.
Karan Tejpal allows the story to breathe through its silences, the still frames, and the emotional unease. There are no heroes here. No saviours riding in with answers. Just two flawed brothers, a mother in agony, and a society that is quick to blame, quicker to judge, and completely unwilling to listen.
There’s no unnecessary world-building, no side-tracks, no spoon-feeding. The plot is razor-sharp: a child goes missing, fingers are pointed, and in the background, poverty, privilege, caste, gender, and misinformation quietly shape every decision. The film understands that the most terrifying part of a crisis isn’t the event itself but how people react to it.
Let’s give you a little context. The two brothers are already not harmonious. There is a significant difference between the two. However, amidst all the tension that is going on, a family dispute gets over them. Exactly how it happens in reality. There is a corrupt system, there is a mob and a situation that is deadly but the hidden anger between the brothers doesn’t hesitate to boil. That’s how powerful the film’s writing is.
Abhishek Banerjee and Mia Maelzer anchor the film with layered, haunting performances. Banerjee, especially, carries the burden of transformation: from indifference to accountability.
The script never panders. It trusts the audience to catch the nuances in the way people talk, judge, dismiss.
Stolen deliberately tries to disturb, to provoke, and to make you think about which side of the moral fence you really stand on.
So is the film all perfect?
Yes, but with a problem. There is nothing out of the park in this film. Every trope is familiar. A desperate mother, two contrasting brothers, mob attack and moral ambiguity. Every theme in the film is something that you have already watched. But, whatever tropes they picked, they executed in a good manner. Do not expect something extraordinary and the film will definitely impress you.
Music and Other Departments?
The music has been done in a well manner. The tension is well reflected and it doesn’t even get loud. Arpad Bondy is the man behind.
The other thing that stands out is the overall setting and lighting. Scenes shot in dark looks like shot only and only in the car lighting. There is no comfort in the film, either in story or otherwise. The makers have kept it as raw as they could.
Highlights?
Screenplay
Performances
Direction
Music
Drawbacks?
Characters are pretty much unidimensional
Every trope seems familiar
Did I Enjoy It?
Absolutely
Will You Recommend It?
If you are not disturbed by films then hell yeah.
Stolen OTT Movie Review by Binged Bureau