Homebound (2025)

Movie · 2025 · Drama · 2h 2m · R · HI

Curator score: 8.9/10 (56.9K ratings)

No feeling is final.

Overview

Two childhood friends from a small North Indian village chase a police job that promises them the dignity they’ve long been denied. But as they inch closer to their dream, mounting desperation threatens the bond that holds them together.

Ratings

Director

Neeraj Ghaywan

Production

Dharma Productions, Sikelia Productions, Quercus Productions

Cast

Ishaan Khatter, Vishal Jethwa, Janhvi Kapoor, Shalini Vatsa, Pankaj Dubey, Harshika Parmar, Chandan Anand, Dadhi Pandey, Sudipta Saxena, Kuldeep Raghuvanshi, Yogendra Vikram Singh, Vijay Vikram Singh, Akanksha Ojha, Balendar Singh, Arpit Kumar Mishra, Tejas Mathur, Raghav Gite, Manisha Purohit, Daya Sagar, Rajkumar Raikwar

Where to watch

Netflix, Netflix Standard with Ads

Curator Review

Verdict

A searing, emotionally bruising social drama about friendship, dignity, and the violence of a system that promises mobility while rationing humanity. It sounds intense, unsparing, and deeply rooted in contemporary Indian realities, with the kind of moral pressure and performance-driven heartbreak that lingers long after the credits.

Best for

  • Viewers drawn to socially urgent dramas
  • Fans of emotionally devastating friendship stories
  • Audiences interested in caste, class, and institutional critique
  • People who like realist filmmaking with strong performances
  • Those comfortable with bleak, cathartic cinema

Skip if

  • You want a light or uplifting watch
  • You prefer plot-driven entertainment over social realism
  • You’re sensitive to oppression, humiliation, or sustained emotional distress
  • You want a tidy, hopeful ending

Overview

Homebound looks like the kind of film that turns a simple ambition into a devastating study of how systems shape, strain, and sometimes break human bonds. The premise is deceptively straightforward: two friends chasing a police job for dignity and escape. But the emotional force seems to come from everything surrounding that goal — caste, poverty, bureaucracy, and the everyday indignities that make “progress” feel like a cruel slogan rather than a lived reality.

Worth noting

The Letterboxd response points to a film that hits hard not because it is abstractly political, but because it feels painfully recognizable. Viewers describe harsh daylight realism, emotional exhaustion, and a sense that the movie is less exposing hidden injustice than naming what many already see and endure. That usually signals a work with real moral weight, especially when the performances and direction are carrying the argument as much as the script.

Bottom line

If you’re in the mood for a serious, unflinching drama about friendship under pressure, this sounds essential. It may not offer comfort, but it appears to offer clarity — and the rare feeling of a film that understands how dignity can be both a dream and a battleground.

Top Letterboxd reviews

Anas Arif · 1976 likes

one battle after another

parzival (4★) · 868 likes

Homebound gets this thing about “progress” in India, how it’s always announced like some achievement but on the ground it just looks like people barely managing. Whether if it's promotion, a reunion, a roof that isn’t even fully done and suddenly it’s framed like the system works. It doesn’t, it just lets you survive and then takes credit for that. Even basic dignity feels conditional, like you’re allowed a little, not too much. The harsh daylight in the film makes… more Homebound gets this thing about “progress” in India, how it’s always announced like some achievement but on the ground it just looks like people barely managing. Whether if it's promotion, a reunion, a roof that isn’t even fully done and suddenly it’s framed like the system works. It doesn’t, it just lets you survive and then takes credit for that. Even basic dignity feels conditional, like you’re allowed a little, not too much. The harsh daylight in the film makes… more

Rabbu 🎐 (4★) · 821 likes

Saala ye dukh kahe khatam nahi hota hai be?

Michael James (4★) · 648 likes

While it’s easy to label caste, religion, poverty, prejudice against identities as systemic injustices, the most unsettling part is realising that every one of these systems were man made, fed and sustained even today by the very society that claims to be progressive. Wonder if there is really anything to feel pride about.. be it tradition, culture, race or even language, when people from every group still play a part in them. Homebound digs right into this discomfort. Neeraj Ghaywan mirrors the harsh reality… more

Tushaarr (5★) · 643 likes

So strange that life goes on after finishing a film like homebound.

Recommended similar titles

Masaan

2015 · Drama · 1h 49m · PG-13 · Curator 8.6/10 (35.3K ratings)

A poignant Indian drama about grief, caste, and the possibility of dignity in a rigid social order.

Article 15

2019 · Crime, Drama, Thriller · 2h 10m · Curator 6.8/10 (56.6K ratings) · Where to watch: Netflix, Netflix Standard with Ads

A direct, system-focused social thriller about caste discrimination and institutional failure in rural India.

A Separation

2011 · Drama · 2h 3m · PG-13 · Curator 9.7/10 (456.8K ratings)

A morally layered drama where class pressure and social obligations steadily fracture personal relationships.

The Lunchbox

2013 · Drama, Romance · 1h 44m · Curator 8.5/10 (137.4K ratings)

A humane Mumbai drama that finds tenderness and loneliness inside everyday urban struggle.

Pather Panchali

1955 · Drama, History · 2h 5m · Curator 9.8/10 (41.9K ratings) · Where to watch: Max

A foundational realist portrait of poverty, dignity, and family endurance in rural life.

The White Tiger

2021 · Drama · 2h 5m · R · Curator 5.6/10 (146.5K ratings) · Where to watch: Netflix, Netflix Standard with Ads

A sharp class-struggle story about ambition, exploitation, and the violence beneath upward mobility.

Salaam Bombay!

1988 · Crime, Drama · 1h 53m · PG-13 · Curator 8.1/10 (21.5K ratings)

An immersive street-level drama about survival, deprivation, and the harshness of social neglect.

The Pursuit of Happyness

2006 · Drama · 1h 57m · PG-13 · Curator 7.3/10 (1.6M ratings)

A more mainstream but still emotionally grounded story of grinding ambition and survival against the odds.

Gully Boy

2019 · Drama, Music · 2h 36m · Curator 6.8/10 (47K ratings)

An aspirational underdog story that shares the energy of striving against class barriers, though in a more uplifting mode.

Topics

social drama, caste oppression, friendship, institutional critique, realism, bleak tone, emotional devastation, contemporary India, class struggle, human dignity

Open Homebound (2025) on Curator TV