![]() Maskati’s performance reckons, however indirectly, with the kitschy abusers we get from those movies-we’re accustomed to stalkers being over-the-top, with cheesy grins that bring some levity to real-life disturbing behavior. ![]() ![]() Given this familiarity, you wish "Evil Eye" did a little bit more with its concept or that it was tighter in making its point. Usha thinks that her abusive ex is manifested in Sandeep, and in the anxious thrills of this story from writer Madhuri Shekar, she can't get her husband Krishnan ( Bernard White) or Pallavi to believe her.Įspecially as Sandeep starts to reveal more of his cold, controlling side, "Evil Eye" is a type of serious riff on salacious stalker movies, but instead of a marriage being threatened by an outsider, it’s the boyfriend who threatens to get in between a mother and daughter. ![]() In the past, Usha had a horrific and abusive boyfriend, who nearly killed Usha before he died himself-a trauma of which Pallavi is unaware, but that we see in flashy fragments from Usha's memory when she is triggered. The title for this "Welcome to the Blumhouse" installment is related to a curse that Usha has been trying to prevent her daughter from since birth. ![]()
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