‘Obsess’ Review — How One Moment of Anger Turns Into a Deadly Nightmare
In 'Obsess', a single angry confrontation spirals into a terrifying survival game. Read our review of Peter Wilson’s bold, dialogue-light Hindi thriller that relies on raw performances and psychological tension.
Obsess
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Experimental thrillers have always attracted a niche section of Bollywood audiences, and ‘Obsess’ is one such bold attempt. Built almost entirely around two characters, the film explores how a small road rage incident spirals into a terrifying psychological battle between a mentally unstable man and a fiercely independent woman.
Story
The story begins in a North Indian city on a dark night. Peter (Peter Wilson) is seen murdering someone inside a deserted house. Mentally disturbed and emotionally broken, Peter believes he is not wrong — just weak, but not defeated. Sitting inside his truck after the murder, he consumes medicines and alcohol while talking to himself.
Soon, he receives a message from his boss informing him that he has been fired for drunk driving. Humiliated by the abusive texts, Peter loses control completely. He drives straight to his boss’s house and brutally kills him as well.
Peter later enters a church and confesses to murdering a woman inside the confession box. But shockingly, moments later, he murders the priest too, claiming that he no longer trusts anyone.
On the other side is Sara (Esha Singh), who is going through marital issues with her husband. She refuses to give him custody of their child and leaves for her mother’s house with her son Sachin.
While driving, road construction forces her to stop the car. As she steps out to attend to her child sitting in the backseat, Peter’s truck stops behind her. Drunk and impatient, Peter keeps honking continuously. Irritated, Sara walks up to his truck, yells at him and calls him ill-mannered. Peter simply stares at her silently.
That one argument slowly turns into a deadly game. On one side is a psychologically disturbed killer, and on the other is a mother willing to fight for her child at any cost. Their conflict becomes a tense survival thriller that keeps the audience constantly anxious.
Direction
Director Peter Wilson deserves credit for handling a feature film with almost only two central characters. He presents Peter’s disturbed mental state in a raw and natural manner. Peter sees himself as the victim of society and believes violence is justified against those who wrong him.
At the same time, Sara’s ego, anger and emotional vulnerability are also explored effectively. Wilson succeeds in maintaining tension throughout the 2-hour-18-minute runtime.
One of the film’s most unique aspects is that there are almost no dialogues. The storytelling depends heavily on silence, expressions and atmosphere, making the psychological tension feel even more disturbing and realistic.
Performances
Peter Wilson delivers the film’s standout performance. Through expressions and body language alone, he successfully portrays the pain, frustration and dangerous instability of his character. Since the film has very limited dialogues, his facial expressions become the primary driving force of the narrative.
As a psychotic killer, Wilson manages to create fear without relying on exaggerated theatrics. His calmness often feels more terrifying than violence itself.
Esha Singh also leaves a strong impact as Sara. Initially appearing as an egoistic and fearless woman, her character slowly transforms into a desperate mother trying to save her child. Esha handles this emotional transition naturally and convincingly.
The face-off scenes between Peter Wilson and Esha Singh are among the strongest moments of the film. Despite minimal dialogues, both actors keep the tension alive through performance alone.
Final Verdict
‘Obsess’ is not a regular commercial thriller. It is an experimental psychological drama that explores how one impulsive moment of anger can destroy lives forever.
The kidnapping and chase sequences involving Sara’s child are genuinely disturbing and emotionally intense. As viewers, you constantly feel trapped inside the nightmare unfolding on screen.
With minimal dialogues, strong performances and sustained psychological tension, ‘Obsess’ becomes a gripping cinematic experience. More than just a thriller, it works as a warning about anger, ego and mental instability.
‘Obsess’ is the kind of film that stays with the audience long after the credits roll.