The film cleverly shifts the setting. The original was about a real couple’s disturbing experience in a secluded house. The sequel, however, introduces a . A sleazy producer (played by Sandhya Mridul) decides to cash in on the viral "Ragini MMS" incident by making a horror movie based on the same story. The lead actress is the bubbly and ambitious Sunny Leone (playing a fictionalized version of herself).
The tagline said it all: “S x, horror, aur pagalpanti.”* But did the film succeed in its madness, or did it become a victim of its own ambition? Let’s re-enter the haunted bungalow. ragini mms 2
The film’s biggest flaw is its tone. It wants to be scary, sexy, and funny—often in the same scene. The "pagalpanti" (craziness) frequently undermines the horror. One minute you’re watching a terrifying possession scene, and the next, a comedian (played by the late, great Kader Khan) is making double-entendre jokes. The film cleverly shifts the setting
⭐⭐½ (2.5/5) Watch it for: The meta concept, the haunted house atmosphere, and unintentional comedy. Skip it if: You hate found-footage, jump scares, or explicit content. A sleazy producer (played by Sandhya Mridul) decides
The item numbers, while visually striking, feel like speed bumps in the horror narrative. The film struggles to balance its B-movie grindhouse energy with the genuine pathos of Ragini’s backstory (which involves sexual assault and revenge).
When the original Ragini MMS released in 2011, it was a game-changer for Bollywood horror. Borrowing the "found-footage" style popularized by The Blair Witch Project and Paranormal Activity , it offered a gritty, realistic scares wrapped in a bold, adult theme. So, when hit screens in 2014, expectations were high. But instead of a simple rehash, director Bhushan Patel delivered something unexpected: a meta-horror film that blended erotica, comedy, and supernatural dread.