Silences) is a 2015 Indian Hindi-language romantic thriller horror film, written by Vikram Bhatt and directed by debutant, Karan Darra.
"[4] Kabir Malhotra is a novelist whose failed career and relationship with Simran made him move to Kashmir in search of an inspirational story.
Realization dawns upon Kabir, and he recalls Meera speaking on the phone in a man's voice and never seeing Jaidev in person.
She reveals that she was involved in a hit-and-run case two years ago and, to evade imprisonment, ran away to a small town in Kashmir, where she met Jaidev, a rich industrialist.
[7] Producer Mahesh Bhatt in an interview said "With a recipe of great music, state-of-art digital effects and a love story that brings back the intrigue of Mahal, it will repackage and raise the bar for the horror genre in Bollywood".
[18][19] On the other hand, the video game will feature different characters who will all unveil a dark secret and tell a different story as the player advances.
[17] The soundtrack of Khamoshiyan was composed by Ankit Tiwari, Jeet Gannguli, Navad Zafar & Bobby Imraan.
The first single from the album, "Khamoshiyan", composed by Jeet Gannguli and crooned by Arijit Singh was released on 10 December 2014.
The second single from the album, "Tu Har Lamha", composed by Bobby Imraan and sung by Arijit Singh, was released on 19 December 2014.
[22] The song "Beegh Loon" was Sung by Prakriti Kakar to Describe Meera and Jaidev's Love Story and how they Got Married.
Rediff.com wrote that "the album gets off to a superb start with the man for all seasons, Arijit Singh's title song Khamoshiyan.
[23] In a negative review, Sankhayan Ghosh of The Indian Express gave the soundtrack two stars out of five writing that the tunes were "worn out" and that their arrangement and melody sounded so similar that "one can actually stitch all of them seamlessly into one song."
Shakti Shetty of Mid-Day.com noted similarities between Khamoshiyan and Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho and Robert Zemeckis' What Lies Beneath, but commented, "the Indianisation doesn't really come out great.
"[24] Renuka Vyavahare of The Times of India gave the movie 1.5 stars out of five writing that Fazal and Pabbi were "decent" but the horror track failed miserably and comprised "standard scares, [an] over-stretched climax, formulaic ‘dark secrets’ and a clichéd story.
"[25] For The Indian Express, Shubhra Gupta gave Khamoshiyan 1.5 stars out of five, writing that the movie "does exactly what you expect" and "plays out familiar erotic-horror-thriller ingredients.