Sangharsh 1999 -hindi- Akshay Kumar-preity Zinta-ashutosh Rana -

Sangharsh is not a comfortable watch. It is grim, oppressive, and occasionally uneven. But it is essential viewing for three reasons: Ashutosh Rana’s bone-chilling villainy, Akshay Kumar’s most underrated performance, and Preity Zinta’s proof that she could lead a dark, complex film. For fans of Indian psychological horror, Sangharsh remains a landmark—a brave, flawed, unforgettable struggle between light and the abyss.

In the landscape of late 1990s Bollywood, dominated by family dramas, romantic musicals, and formulaic action films, Sangharsh (meaning Struggle ) arrived as a jarring, uncomfortable outlier. Released on September 3, 1999, the film was a bold psychological thriller that borrowed the skeleton of Jonathan Demme’s The Silence of the Lambs (1991) but dressed it in distinctly Indian textures of guilt, faith, and visceral terror. Though it was not a commercial blockbuster, Sangharsh has since garnered a devoted cult following, largely due to its atmospheric dread and a career-defining performance from its antagonist. The film follows Reet Oberoi (Preity Zinta), a young, hot-headed officer of the Crime Branch. She is tasked with hunting down a ruthless serial killer who abducts young children from slums. The killer, who believes he is an agent of God, performs ritualistic sacrifices to attain immortality. With no psychological profiling experience and the case growing cold, Reet is forced to seek help from the last person anyone wants to meet: Lajja Shankar Pandey (Akshay Kumar), a brilliant but insane former police officer convicted for killing a suspect. He is now incarcerated in a high-security mental asylum. Sangharsh is not a comfortable watch

The asylum interview scenes. The last 20 minutes. And a line of dialogue that will haunt you long after the credits roll: “Aurat ka dil... aur bhagwan ka ghar... dono mein andhera hota hai.” (A woman’s heart... and God’s home... both are dark.) For fans of Indian psychological horror, Sangharsh remains