We sent an email to [email protected]

Didn't you get the email?

By joining, you agree to the Terms and Policies and Privacy Policy and to receive email from the Fandango Media Brands .

User 8 or more characters with a number and a lowercase letter. No spaces.

username@email

By continuing, you agree to the Privacy Policy and the Terms and Policies , and to receive email from the Fandango Media Brands .

Log in or sign up for Rotten Tomatoes

Trouble logging in?

By creating an account, you agree to the Privacy Policy and the Terms and Policies , and to receive email from Rotten Tomatoes and to receive email from the Fandango Media Brands .

By creating an account, you agree to the Privacy Policy and the Terms and Policies , and to receive email from Rotten Tomatoes.

Email not verified

Let's keep in touch.

Rotten Tomatoes Newsletter

Sign up for the Rotten Tomatoes newsletter to get weekly updates on:

  • Upcoming Movies and TV shows
  • Rotten Tomatoes Podcast
  • Media News + More

By clicking "Sign Me Up," you are agreeing to receive occasional emails and communications from Fandango Media (Fandango, Vudu, and Rotten Tomatoes) and consenting to Fandango's Privacy Policy and Terms and Policies . Please allow 10 business days for your account to reflect your preferences.

OK, got it!

  • About Rotten Tomatoes®
  • Login/signup

rekha netflix movie review

Movies in theaters

  • Opening This Week
  • Top Box Office
  • Coming Soon to Theaters
  • Certified Fresh Movies

Movies at Home

  • Fandango at Home
  • Prime Video
  • Most Popular Streaming Movies
  • What to Watch New

Certified fresh picks

  • 80% Emilia Pérez Link to Emilia Pérez
  • 96% A Real Pain Link to A Real Pain
  • 100% All We Imagine as Light Link to All We Imagine as Light

New TV Tonight

  • 75% Dune: Prophecy: Season 1
  • 75% Landman: Season 1
  • 83% Interior Chinatown: Season 1
  • -- Based On A True Story: Season 2
  • -- The Sex Lives of College Girls: Season 3
  • 100% Outlander: Season 7
  • -- A Man on the Inside: Season 1
  • -- Cruel Intentions: Season 1
  • -- Our Oceans: Season 1
  • -- Making Manson: Season 1

Most Popular TV on RT

  • 100% Arcane: League of Legends: Season 2
  • 95% The Penguin: Season 1
  • 83% The Day of the Jackal: Season 1
  • 75% Cross: Season 1
  • 90% Say Nothing: Season 1
  • 95% Silo: Season 2
  • 85% Cobra Kai: Season 6
  • 100% From: Season 3
  • Best TV Shows
  • Most Popular TV

Certified fresh pick

  • 100% Arcane: League of Legends: Season 2 Link to Arcane: League of Legends: Season 2
  • All-Time Lists
  • Binge Guide
  • Comics on TV
  • Five Favorite Films
  • Video Interviews
  • Weekend Box Office
  • Weekly Ketchup
  • What to Watch

30 Most Popular Movies Right Now: What to Watch In Theaters and Streaming

25 Most Popular TV Shows Right Now: What to Watch on Streaming

What to Watch: In Theaters and On Streaming.

Awards Tour

Weekend Box Office: Red One Debuts in First, but Faces Uphill Battle

Movie Re-Release Calendar 2024 & 2025: Your Guide to Movies Back In Theaters

  • Trending on RT
  • Gladiator II First Reviews
  • Holiday Programming
  • Verified Hot Movies

Where to Watch

Watch Rekha with a subscription on Netflix.

Critics Reviews

Cast & crew.

Jithin Issac Thomas

Vincy Aloshious

Vishnu Govindhan

Premalatha Thayineri

Renji Kankol

Home » Movies

Rekha Review – a mediocre female-led psychological thriller

rekha-review

We review the 2023 Netflix film Rekha, which does not contain spoilers.

Rekha is an Indian revenge thriller that made its cinematic debut in February 2023 before its global premiere on Netflix in March. The Malayalam-language feature stars Vincy Aloshious in the titular role and was written and directed by Jithin Issac Thomas .

Rekha (2023) Review and Plot Summary

During the first half of  Rekha , it is easy to forget you’re watching a thriller, as the vibe is more in the romance genre. The titular heroine is an atypical teenager who lives with her parents. She’s pursuing an education in sports and hates household chores but is very close to her kind and permissive father.

Like many teenagers, Rekha is in the early stages of a relationship with the local shopkeeper’s unemployed son, Arjun ( Unni Lalu ). 

Arjun is older yet insists he’s madly in love. He’s also a bit too handsy and demanding when it comes to asking Rekha for physical affection. One night, he sneaks into her room and coerces the young woman to sleep with him. The next day, she realizes she’s made a terrible mistake and is forced to seek revenge. 

Rheka is a more nuanced and artistic version of rape-revenge features that plagued the 1970s horror genre. And the scenes where the young lead is persuaded to do things she doesn’t want to do are compellingly hard to watch and frighteningly realistic. 

The film is filled to the brim with gratuitous violence, shaky close-ups, and fast-paced shots. But it somehow doesn’t fully tie together, and the narrative doesn’t make as much sense as it should. 

READ: Best Netflix Movies of All Time

The overall pacing is a bit off, and the second half leading up to the final confrontation seems to drag unnecessarily. 

From the beginning, our lead is shown to be different from other girls, from the clothes she wears to her unusual physical strength, and the villain’s mistake is to underestimate her. 

Vincy Aloshious is fantastic at portraying her character’s rage and deranged tendencies, but in scenes where she should show any other emotions, the performance falls a bit flat. Her co-star, Unni Lalu, is great as the love interest turned villain, and the chemistry between the two leads is one of the few things holding it all together. 

YouTube video

Is the 2023 film Rekha good or bad?

Rekha is not a good film, but it’s not bad, either. There’s a lot of promise in the Malayalam female-led psychological thriller, but the execution is mediocre at best.

It would have been more enjoyable to watch without the overuse of cinematographic gimmicks and artificially extended runtime. 

Is the 2023 movie Rekha worth watching?

Fans of Malayalam cinema will probably enjoy this title and its approach to the scorned woman trope. But there are better-made movies out there exploring the same themes. 

What did you think of the 2023 Netflix film Rekha? Comment below.

More Stories

  • Rekha Ending Explained

rekha netflix movie review

Article by Lori Meek

Lori Meek has been a Ready Steady Cut contributing writer since September 2022 and has had over 400 published articles since. She studied Film and Television at Southampton Solent University, where she gained most of her knowledge and passion for the entertainment industry. Lori’s work is also featured on platforms such as TBreak Media and ShowFaves.

jack-ryan-season-3-episode-5-recap

Jack Ryan season 3, episode 5 recap - how did Petr escape?

Netflix series Firefly Lane season 1

Firefly Lane season 1 review - Katherine Heigl and Sarah Chalke charm our socks off

This website cannot be displayed as your browser is extremely out of date.

Please update your browser to one of the following: Chrome , Firefox , Edge

Logo

'Rekha' review: Vincy Aloshious soars in minimalist revenge drama

'Rekha' review: Vincy Aloshious soars in minimalist revenge drama

Jithin Issac Thomas’ second feature-length film Rekha sounds like one of the many twisted tales narrated by his main character from his debut feature, Attention Please. The setting is Kasaragod, and the makers were wise enough to keep English subtitles. Despite being someone from the Malabar region, I had to look at the translation below to comprehend some of the characters’ lines.

The first film that comes to mind when I think of Kasaragod is Thinkalazhcha Nishchayam, and for a while there, Rekha moves with a kind of pace and tone that makes one assume that it’s going to be another one like it. But this being a Jithin Issac Thomas film, anything can happen. I mean, this is the same guy who made the segment ‘Pra. Thoo. Mu’ from the anthology Freedom Fight. If you think you are getting a feel-good film, think again. Even if that were his intention, I believe he’ll make sure you get very uncomfortable first.

The star and USP of Rekha are Vincy Aloshious playing the titular tomboyish woman in love with Arjun, an unemployed young man from the neighbourhood, played by the gifted Unni Lalu, who essayed the rebellious protagonist from ‘Pra. Thoo. Mu’. The lion’s share of Rekha’s pre-interval portions sets up the romance between the two while giving us a sense of the neighbourhood—its sights, sounds, the homes of Rekha and Arjun, their neighbours, the mundane small talk comprising subjects irrelevant and insignificant to an outsider but a big deal for these people.

When you have characters exchange banter in their own dialect, peppered with their own quirks, you sit there soaking it all in. It’s just the little things—an argument about a hen laying eggs in the next home, an attempt to retrieve a metal vessel that has fallen into the well, a local member moonlighting as a broker... In the meantime, we get a bit of background about Rekha. She has been to a sports school and is prepping for PSC. Only one of these details would turn useful at a crucial juncture in her life.

There is an immersive quality to the visual and sound design, notwithstanding the minimalist approach. Director of photography Abraham Joseph, who made a mark in Kumari, fills the atmosphere with enough grit and menace. The closing nighttime stretch in a deserted Kochi street has an otherwordly quality while being careful not to make every frame look pretty.

One of the film’s most notable sequences has the main couple engaged in a phone text interaction before they video call each other. We have seen the onscreen chatbox display approach before, but if I recall correctly, the actors’ voices ‘reading out’ their respective messages while their lips don’t move is a first. Impatient viewers might find such a thing cumbersome, but there is a seemingly good reason for Jithin to extend these digital interactions.

Another scene has Arjun barging into Rekha’s home unannounced in the hope of making love. This moment is remarkably staged, with Vincy superbly portraying Rekha’s concerns about discovery and apprehension at making physical contact for the first time. For a while, you think it’s all so sweet until this clandestine rendezvous’ true and twisted implications become apparent much later.

Unlike Attention Please, Rekha manages to venture outside the main characters’ setting after a point—when it morphs into an intense revenge thriller after Rekha discovers an act of injustice. When Arjun goes on the run, she is devastated. Jithin, who has in his last two films shown a penchant for conveying a character’s troubled state of mind through masterful editing, portrays some of Rekha’s most turbulent episodes similarly, with intercuts, blurs, and surreal imagery.

When Rekha finally goes into avenger mode, the film brings the promise of severe retribution, be it the way she deals with Arjun or any other sicko she meets along the way. And, in any film featuring characters with deviant behaviour, unsettling situations go with the territory. But unlike this week’s other release, Christopher, these are not too disturbing as Rekha is a film where fate favours the woman more. However, if you are a pet lover, the offscreen murder of a dog might shake you.

Rekha is not an easy film to watch. However, the protagonist’s ‘sports background’ offers a comforting cushion in several situations of peril for the once-naive woman who got into a relationship because she was bothered by all her ‘taken’ friends. I found the third act chase stretched out more than necessary; perhaps Jithin wanted to present a stark contrast to the elongated lovey-dovey portions I mentioned earlier. The sustained tension works in most places, but at the same time, there was the nagging feeling that perhaps taking out 15 mins could’ve made the third act tighter and more engaging.

As the end credits rolled, I remembered that Valentine’s Day arrives in four days. Perhaps Rekha was intended as a cautionary tale for those desperate to get into a relationship to show others that they also “have a line.” Tread carefully, young ones.

Film: Rekha Director: Jithin Issac Thomas Cast: Vincy Aloshious, Unni Lalu Rating: 3.5/5

Follow The New Indian Express channel on WhatsApp  

Download the TNIE app to stay with us and follow the latest

Related Stories

IMAGES

  1. Rekha Review: Complex and Realistic Female Rage Representation

    rekha netflix movie review

  2. Rekha

    rekha netflix movie review

  3. Rekha Movie Review

    rekha netflix movie review

  4. Rekha’ Netflix Movie Review

    rekha netflix movie review

  5. Rekha (Malayalam) Movie Review In Hindi

    rekha netflix movie review

  6. Rekha Movie (2023)

    rekha netflix movie review

VIDEO

  1. Restart Web Series Review