B.a. Pass Reviews ^hot^ May 2026

And then, tucked between a one-star rant about “too much realism” and a five-star review titled “Masterpiece for depressed people only,” Alok found a long, plain-text review signed by a single initial: D.

Alok Sharma had been a film critic for eleven years, and in that time, he had developed a strict rule: never read the user reviews before writing his own. But B.A. Pass was different. b.a. pass reviews

He scrolled deeper. A review from Sweety_18 : “Hero’s glasses are same as my ex-boyfriend. Could not focus. 2 stars.” Another from Rajneesh_tiger : “Interval ke baad kuch nahi hota. Waste of 200 rupees. Should have watched Pushpa reloaded.” And then, tucked between a one-star rant about

The film was a small, grey-skied indie about a scholarship boy from Jhansi who moves to Delhi for college and slowly gets ground down by the system—ragging, loan sharks, a cynical girlfriend, and finally a quiet, devastating betrayal by his own professor. It had no item song, no hero’s arc. The protagonist, Deepak, ended the film not with a gunshot, but by simply disappearing into a crowd at Nizamuddin station, his degree never used. Pass was different