A chilling, atmospheric moment from Tumbbad with a dark, unsettling mood.

20 Most Underrated Bollywood Movies You Need to Watch (Hidden Gems List)

Some of the best Bollywood films ever made opened to near-empty theatres. No massive marketing campaign, no viral trailer moment, no opening weekend fanfare — just a quietly exceptional film that most people walked right past and discovered years later on a streaming platform at 11pm on a Tuesday.

This list is for those films. The most underrated Bollywood movies that deserved far bigger audiences — ranked with IMDb ratings, streaming platforms, and honest explanations of why each one slipped through the cracks. Whether you’re looking for a psychological thriller, a slow-burn drama, a dark comedy, or a festival film that never got its moment — there’s something here you haven’t seen yet.

All 20 Underrated Bollywood Hidden Gems at a Glance

# Film Year IMDb Genre Watch On
1 Tumbbad 2018 8.2 Horror / Folk Thriller Prime Video
2 Ugly 2013 8.0 Crime Drama Netflix
3 Manorama Six Feet Under 2007 7.7 Neo-Noir Mystery Prime Video
4 Aligarh 2015 7.8 Drama / Social Prime Video
5 Paan Singh Tomar 2012 8.2 Biographical Crime Prime Video
6 Titli 2014 7.5 Crime Drama Prime Video
7 Ankhon Dekhi 2013 7.9 Philosophical Drama Prime Video
8 Talvar 2015 8.1 Crime / Investigative Netflix
9 Page 3 2005 7.3 Social Drama Prime Video
10 Hotel Salvation 2016 7.7 Drama Netflix
11 Dhobi Ghat 2011 6.9 Art Drama Prime Video
12 Ek Hasina Thi 2004 7.4 Revenge Thriller Prime Video
13 Shahid 2012 8.1 Biographical Drama Prime Video
14 Ship of Theseus 2012 8.2 Philosophical Drama MUBI
15 Newton 2017 7.5 Political Drama Prime Video
16 Superboys of Malegaon 2024 8.1 Comedy Drama Netflix
17 Stree 2018 7.8 Horror Comedy Prime Video
18 Raat Akeli Hai 2020 7.4 Crime Thriller Netflix
19 Serious Men 2020 7.6 Dark Comedy Drama Netflix
20 Qala 2022 7.5 Psychological Drama Netflix

HORROR / FOLKLORE

1. Tumbbad (2018) — India’s Greatest Genre Film Nobody Saw in Theatres

Director: Rahi Anil Barve Cast: Sohum Shah, Jyoti Malshe⭐ IMDb: 8.2🎬 Genre: Folk Horror / Dark Fantasy📺 Watch on: Prime Video
Dark, eerie scene from Tumbbad with a haunting, mysterious atmosphere. underrated Bollywood movies

Tumbbad took six years to make, spans three generations, and builds an entire mythological world out of a single, devastating idea: what happens when greed becomes inherited? Set across colonial and post-independence India, the film follows a family cursed by their obsession with a forgotten goddess’s hoard of gold — and the price every generation pays to claim it.

There is nothing else in Bollywood that looks or feels like Tumbbad. The production design, the colour palette, the rain-soaked dread, the folklore — it’s a complete cinematic world built from scratch. It opened to a modest theatrical run in 2018 and was slowly discovered on streaming, where it has since become one of the most-recommended Hindi films on every platform.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated Horror and dark fantasy were not considered commercially viable in mainstream Bollywood in 2018. No major star. Unconventional narrative structure. Limited screens at release. It needed a streaming audience to find it — and eventually did.

Best For: Anyone who thinks Bollywood can’t do genuinely original genre cinema. This film will change that opinion permanently.

CRIME DRAMA

2. Ugly (2013) — Anurag Kashyap’s Most Overlooked Masterpiece

Director: Anurag Kashyap Cast: Ronit Roy, Rahul Bhat, Tejaswini Kolhapure⭐ IMDb: 8.0🎬 Genre: Crime Drama / Psychological📺 Watch on: Netflix

A 10-year-old girl goes missing. Every adult around her — her father, stepfather, mother, and the police — is too consumed by their own greed, dysfunction, and self-interest to find her. Ugly is Anurag Kashyap’s bleakest and most morally honest film, and it’s the one almost nobody saw.

There is no hero in this film. There is no resolution that feels earned. The film holds up a mirror to a particular kind of moral ugliness — the kind that lives in people who consider themselves ordinary — and refuses to look away. Ronit Roy delivers one of the most chilling performances in recent Bollywood. It was shelved for over a year due to a distribution dispute and barely released when it finally did.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated Distribution disputes delayed release by over a year, killing pre-release buzz. No major stars. Deeply uncomfortable subject matter with zero crowd-pleasing moments. It’s not an easy watch — which is precisely why it matters.

Best For: Viewers who can handle genuinely dark cinema without a redemption arc. One of the best films Bollywood has ever produced — almost nobody knows it exists.

NEO-NOIR

3. Manorama Six Feet Under (2007) — Bollywood’s Best Noir Film

Director: Navdeep Singh Cast: Abhay Deol, Raima Sen, Gul Panag⭐ IMDb: 7.7🎬 Genre: Neo-Noir Mystery / Thriller📺 Watch on: Prime Video

A government engineer and frustrated crime novelist accepts a private investigation job in a scorched Rajasthan town — and walks into a web of corruption, murder, and institutional rot that goes far deeper than he imagined. Shot with the bleached, heat-drenched look of classic American noir, this is the most cinematically sophisticated thriller Bollywood has produced.

The film is openly inspired by Roman Polanski’s Chinatown — and unlike most inspired-by films, it earns that comparison. It transplants the disillusionment and moral decay of noir into a very specific Indian bureaucratic and social context. Abhay Deol is exceptional — world-weary, quietly funny, and increasingly desperate as the story tightens around him.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated Neo-noir was a niche genre with limited mass market appeal in 2007. Modest marketing. No item songs, no romantic formula, no famous faces. It was made for a specific kind of cinephile audience — and found them slowly over years.

Best For: Fans of crime fiction and classic noir who want to see the genre fully transplanted into Indian soil. Criminally overlooked.

SOCIAL DRAMA

4. Aligarh (2015) — The Most Courageous Bollywood Film of the Decade

Director: Hansal Mehta Cast: Manoj Bajpayee, Rajkummar Rao⭐ IMDb: 7.8🎬 Genre: Biographical Drama / Social📺 Watch on: Prime Video

Professor Siras, a respected academic at Aligarh Muslim University, was secretly filmed in an intimate moment with another man and then suspended from his position. Aligarh is his story — told not as a political film but as a deeply human one about loneliness, dignity, and what it means to have your private self exposed and weaponized against you.

Manoj Bajpayee gives one of the greatest performances in the history of Hindi cinema. There is no grandstanding, no speeches, no victimhood — just a quiet, complex man living with grief and grace. Rajkummar Rao as the journalist who befriends him is equally measured. The film treats its subject with the kind of dignity that most films about marginalized people fail to achieve.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated The subject matter made multiplex chains cautious about wide distribution. Sensitive social themes often face informal resistance at the exhibition level. A film this quiet and personal was never going to get a mass theatrical push — and it deserved one.

Best For: Anyone who wants to see what Bollywood is capable of when it prioritizes human truth over entertainment formula.

BIOGRAPHICAL CRIME

5. Paan Singh Tomar (2012) — The Film That Proves Irrfan Khan Was Irreplaceable

Director: Tigmanshu Dhulia Cast: Irrfan Khan, Mahi Gill⭐ IMDb: 8.2🎬 Genre: Biographical Drama / Crime📺 Watch on: Prime Video

Seven-time national steeplechase champion. Dacoit. Both descriptions belong to the same man. Paan Singh Tomar represented India at the 1958 Asian Games and then — betrayed by a justice system that failed him repeatedly — became one of Madhya Pradesh’s most wanted men. The Indian government declared him a dacoit. He was killed in a police encounter in 1981.

Irrfan Khan plays him with absolute restraint and absolute conviction. The film moves between Paan Singh’s athletic glory and his violent decline with the unhurried confidence of a story that knows its own weight. It never asks for your sympathy — it just shows you what happened and trusts you to feel the horror of how a decorated national athlete was abandoned by the very country he served.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated Shot years before its release. Limited distribution due to its unconventional narrative. Won the National Award for Best Film but still never found a mass audience theatrically. Now considered a classic — but most people only discovered it on streaming.

Best For: Those who want a biopic that respects its subject’s complexity rather than flattening them into a hero or a villain.

CRIME DRAMA

6. Titli (2014) — Raw, Uncomfortable, and Essential

Director: Kanu Behl Cast: Shashank Arora, Shivani Raghuvanshi, Ranvir Shorey⭐ IMDb: 7.5🎬 Genre: Crime Drama / Family📺 Watch on: Prime Video

The youngest son of a violent Delhi family of car-jackers dreams of escaping — buying a parking lot, moving out, starting over. What makes Titli remarkable is how it refuses to make that dream feel heroic. Escape from a toxic system still requires you to participate in it. The film is about cycles of violence, toxic masculinity, and the impossibility of clean breaks from the families that shaped you.

It’s an extremely uncomfortable film in the best possible way. Produced by Dibakar Banerjee and premiered at Cannes, it received rapturous critical responses and then largely vanished from public conversation after a minimal theatrical release.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated Cannes premiere didn’t translate to Indian commercial release muscle. The film’s unrelenting grimness kept mass audiences away. First-time director with no star cast and no conventional plot hooks meant limited theatrical footprint.

Best For: Viewers who want cinema that genuinely disturbs and challenges — not for shock value but for emotional and social honesty.

PHILOSOPHICAL DRAMA

7. Ankhon Dekhi (2013) — The Most Joyfully Unusual Film in Bollywood

Director: Rajat Kapoor Cast: Sanjay Mishra, Rajat Kapoor, Seema Pahwa⭐ IMDb: 7.9🎬 Genre: Philosophical Drama / Comedy📺 Watch on: Prime Video

After a heated argument, a middle-aged Delhi man named Bauji decides he will only believe things he has personally witnessed with his own eyes. Not books. Not newspapers. Not other people’s testimonies. Only what he sees directly. What follows is a gentle, funny, and unexpectedly moving exploration of perception, belief, and what it means to actually pay attention to your own life.

Sanjay Mishra — who most people know from comedy films — gives a career-defining dramatic performance of extraordinary warmth and depth. The film is philosophical without being pretentious, funny without being silly, and emotionally rich without being manipulative. It’s the kind of film that sneaks up on you.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated No conventional plot. No action. No songs in the traditional sense. Tiny release. An ensemble cast of character actors rather than stars. Everything about it ran against the commercial grain — yet it has one of the most passionate cult followings of any Hindi film.

Best For: Anyone who wants a film that makes them think and feel in equal measure without demanding anything from them.

INVESTIGATIVE THRILLER

8. Talvar (2015) — The Most Honest True Crime Film Bollywood Has Made

Director: Meghna Gulzar Cast: Irrfan Khan, Konkona Sen Sharma, Tabu⭐ IMDb: 8.1🎬 Genre: Crime Drama / Investigative Thriller📺 Watch on: Netflix

The Aarushi Talwar murder case divided India — a 14-year-old girl found dead, her parents eventually convicted in a case that many legal observers believe was deeply flawed. Talvar presents three different investigative interpretations of the same evidence and refuses to tell you which one is true.

That refusal is the film’s greatest strength. In a media landscape that demanded a simple verdict, Talvar had the courage to say: we don’t actually know. The parents were later acquitted by the Allahabad High Court in 2017. Irrfan Khan is superb as the CBI investigator brought in to untangle the mess. Meghna Gulzar’s direction is precise and controlled throughout.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated Released in a crowded window with limited screens. The true crime format was not yet the mainstream draw it is today. Its refusal to provide a clean answer frustrated some audiences who wanted resolution — but that’s exactly what makes it great.

Best For: True crime fans and viewers who want a film that respects ambiguity and the limits of what we can actually know.

SOCIAL DRAMA

9. Page 3 (2005) — Still the Sharpest Film About Media and Glamour

Director: Madhur Bhandarkar Cast: Konkona Sen Sharma, Sandhya Mridul, Tara Sharma⭐ IMDb: 7.3🎬 Genre: Social Drama / Satire📺 Watch on: Prime Video

A young journalist covers Mumbai’s Page 3 party circuit — and slowly realizes that the glamour, wealth, and influence on display is a carefully maintained surface concealing abuse, exploitation, and moral emptiness. Page 3 is Madhur Bhandarkar at his most precise and most biting.

Two decades later, it feels more relevant than ever — the social dynamics it examines have simply migrated from Page 3 to Instagram. The film’s insight into how media enables the powerful while appearing to expose them is as sharp today as it was in 2005. Konkona Sen Sharma is outstanding in the lead.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated It found a respectable theatrical audience at the time but has faded from mainstream conversation. It’s rarely included in “best of Bollywood” lists despite its quality and continued relevance.

Best For: Anyone interested in media, celebrity culture, and the gap between public image and private reality.

MEDITATIVE DRAMA

10. Hotel Salvation / Mukti Bhawan (2016) — Bollywood’s Most Quietly Devastating Film

Director: Shubhashish Bhutiani Cast: Aditi Rao Hydari, Lalit Behl, Navnindra Behl⭐ IMDb: 7.7🎬 Genre: Drama / Spiritual📺 Watch on: Netflix

An elderly man announces he will die soon and wants to travel to Varanasi to spend his final days at a moksha guesthouse — a place where Hindus come to die and achieve liberation. His reluctant son accompanies him, expecting a brief trip. They end up staying for weeks.

Hotel Salvation is one of those films that moves with complete confidence and absolute stillness. It doesn’t dramatize death — it sits with it. The relationship between the father who is ready and the son who isn’t is handled with extraordinary delicacy. Made on a tiny budget, shot by a first-time director, it won prizes at international festivals and was seen by almost nobody in India.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated First-time director with no stars in an arthouse format. Subject matter — an old man preparing to die — has limited mass market appeal. Premiered internationally before finding an Indian streaming audience.

Best For: Viewers who appreciate slow, meditative cinema that finds profound meaning in ordinary moments.

ART DRAMA

11. Dhobi Ghat (2011) — Aamir Khan’s Most Misunderstood Film

Director: Aamir Khan / Kiran Rao Cast: Aamir Khan, Prateik Babbar, Monica Dogra, Kriti Malhotra⭐ IMDb: 6.9🎬 Genre: Art Drama / Urban Poetry📺 Watch on: Prime Video

Four people connected by the city of Mumbai — a painter, a washer-man, a banker, and a woman seen only through her home video diaries. Dhobi Ghat is a love letter to Mumbai as much as it is a story — fragmented, atmospheric, and quietly aching.

Audiences expecting an Aamir Khan masala film were genuinely confused. The film is quiet, slow, and interested in texture and mood rather than plot. Kiran Rao’s direction is assured and visually gorgeous. It was criticized at the time for being too arty — but watched as what it actually is, it’s one of the most honest portrayals of Mumbai and urban loneliness in Bollywood history.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated Audience expectation mismatch — Aamir Khan’s name brought in a crowd expecting conventional entertainment and they were given something far more minimal and contemplative. Reviews were divided. It deserves a fresh audience coming to it without those expectations.

Best For: Viewers who appreciate city films, mood-driven narratives, and cinema that observes rather than narrates.

REVENGE THRILLER

12. Ek Hasina Thi (2004) — Sriram Raghavan Before Andhadhun

Director: Sriram Raghavan Cast: Saif Ali Khan, Urmila Matondkar⭐ IMDb: 7.4🎬 Genre: Crime / Revenge Thriller📺 Watch on: Prime Video

A woman falls in love with a charming, manipulative man who uses her to hide criminal activity — and then lets her go to prison for his crimes. When she gets out four years later, she has a plan. Ek Hasina Thi is a tightly constructed revenge thriller that flips the power dynamic in its second half so completely that you forget you predicted where it was going.

Urmila Matondkar is exceptional — her transformation from naive romantic to cold, calculating architect of revenge is one of the most compelling character arcs in 2000s Bollywood. This film proves that Sriram Raghavan’s mastery of the thriller genre was evident long before Andhadhun made him famous.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated Modest box office in a year crowded with bigger productions. The second half’s tonal shift confused some audiences. It was treated as a genre film rather than a quality film — which cost it the critical attention it deserved.

Best For: Thriller fans who want a tight, satisfying revenge narrative with a genuinely strong female lead.

▶ Paste Ek Hasina Thi Trailer YouTube URL here
BIOGRAPHICAL DRAMA

13. Shahid (2012) — Hansal Mehta’s Most Important Film

Director: Hansal Mehta Cast: Rajkummar Rao⭐ IMDb: 8.1🎬 Genre: Biographical Drama / Legal Thriller📺 Watch on: Prime Video

Shahid Azmi was a lawyer who defended terror suspects — men accused in some of India’s most sensitive cases — and was assassinated in his Mumbai office in 2010. Shahid is his story: a man who had himself been falsely imprisoned as a teenager and who dedicated his career to ensuring others were not denied due process.

Rajkummar Rao’s performance is one of the finest in Bollywood’s 21st century — restrained, intelligent, and deeply felt. The film raises hard questions about the justice system, the definition of patriotism, and the personal cost of standing up for the legally unpopular. It won the National Award for Best Direction and Best Actor. Barely anyone saw it in cinemas.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated Politically sensitive subject matter limited distribution and promotion. Rajkummar Rao was not yet a recognized star. Low marketing budget. Won National Awards and then largely disappeared into the streaming library.

Best For: Viewers interested in legal dramas, civil liberties, and films that ask difficult questions about justice without providing comfortable answers.

PHILOSOPHICAL DRAMA

14. Ship of Theseus (2012) — The Best Indian Film Most People Have Never Heard Of

Director: Anand Gandhi Cast: Aida El-Kashef, Neeraj Kabi, Sohum Shah⭐ IMDb: 8.2🎬 Genre: Philosophical Drama📺 Watch on: MUBI

Three separate stories connected by a philosophical question: if a ship’s parts are all gradually replaced, is it still the same ship? An experimental photographer losing her sight, a monk fighting a legal battle against animal testing, a young stockbroker who receives a black-market kidney. Each story examines identity, ethics, and what it means to remain yourself when fundamental things change.

Ship of Theseus is the most intellectually ambitious Indian film in recent memory — and also one of the most humane. It poses enormous philosophical questions through specific, grounded human situations. Aamir Khan saw an early cut and became its distributor — which is the only reason it got any release at all. It’s available on MUBI and is unlike anything else in this list.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated Completely outside mainstream Bollywood — no songs, no stars, no genre hooks. Found its audience through word of mouth among cinephiles. Required Aamir Khan’s personal intervention just to secure distribution.

Best For: Viewers who want cinema that genuinely engages with ideas — not as a backdrop, but as the entire point.

POLITICAL DRAMA

15. Newton (2017) — India’s Funniest and Saddest Democracy Film

Director: Amit V Masurkar Cast: Rajkummar Rao, Pankaj Tripathi, Anjali Patil⭐ IMDb: 7.5🎬 Genre: Political Drama / Dark Comedy📺 Watch on: Prime Video

A sincere, idealistic government clerk is sent to oversee elections in a Maoist-controlled area of Chhattisgarh. He insists on conducting a fair election by the book. Everyone around him — the military, local officials, the voters themselves — tells him it’s impossible and pointless. Newton is quietly hilarious and quietly devastating about what democracy means in practice vs theory.

India’s official entry to the Oscars in 2018. Pankaj Tripathi as the pragmatic army officer who can’t quite understand Newton’s idealism is a masterclass in understated comedy. The film never condescends to any of its characters — it finds the logic in every position, even the ones that undermine its own protagonist.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated Political subject matter + arthouse pacing + no stars = limited mainstream reach. Got a respectable critical reception but a muted theatrical run. Has been steadily building a reputation on streaming ever since.

Best For: Anyone interested in Indian democracy, bureaucracy, and films that find dark comedy in very serious situations.

COMEDY DRAMA

16. Superboys of Malegaon (2024) — The Year’s Most Joyful Hidden Gem

Director: Reema Kagti Cast: Adarsh Gourav, Vineet Kumar Singh, Shashank Arora⭐ IMDb: 8.1🎬 Genre: Comedy Drama / Biographical📺 Watch on: Netflix

In Malegaon — a small town in Maharashtra known for its powerloom industry — a group of friends make hilariously low-budget parodies of Bollywood blockbusters that become genuine local phenomena. Superboys of Malegaon is based on that real story and is one of the most joyful films about creativity, community, and the love of cinema made in years.

Adarsh Gourav — who impressed internationally in The White Tiger — is wonderful as Nasir Khan, the earnest, obsessive filmmaker at the group’s centre. The film understands that small-town ambition isn’t a joke — it’s proof that the desire to create and tell stories is universal and unstoppable regardless of resources.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated Netflix released it with minimal fanfare in a crowded streaming window. No major promotional push. Small-town subject matter without the typical commercial hooks. Word of mouth has been building steadily since release.

Best For: Anyone who loves cinema, loves creativity, and wants a film that will leave them feeling genuinely warm.

HORROR COMEDY

17. Stree (2018) — The Hidden Gem That Became a Franchise

Director: Amar Kaushik Cast: Rajkummar Rao, Shraddha Kapoor, Pankaj Tripathi, Aparshakti Khurana⭐ IMDb: 7.8🎬 Genre: Horror Comedy / Folklore📺 Watch on: Prime Video

A small town is terrorized by a female spirit who abducts men. Three friends try to protect themselves and their community using increasingly absurd methods. Stree is one of the smartest genre films Bollywood has produced — a horror comedy that is genuinely funny, genuinely scary, and genuinely feminist in its use of folklore.

It opened quietly in 2018 and became a massive word-of-mouth hit that nobody predicted. It’s technically not underrated anymore — it spawned a sequel and a franchise — but it started as one of Bollywood’s biggest surprises and is included here because it exemplifies everything a hidden gem can become when audiences actually find it.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated Initially Horror comedy was not a proven formula in Bollywood at the time of release. No major star in a conventional leading role. Released without much studio fanfare — and then audiences discovered it and made it a phenomenon.

Best For: Everyone. Stree is one of the most purely entertaining Hindi films of the last decade.

CRIME THRILLER

18. Raat Akeli Hai (2020) — The OTT Whodunit Nobody Talked About Enough

Director: Honey Trehan Cast: Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Radhika Apte⭐ IMDb: 7.4🎬 Genre: Murder Mystery / Crime Thriller📺 Watch on: Netflix

A murder at a haveli on a wedding night. A police inspector who is an outsider — socially, culturally, geographically — investigating a closed family of secrets. Raat Akeli Hai is a beautifully crafted whodunit with the atmosphere of a classic Agatha Christie mystery transplanted into a decaying Rajput household.

Nawazuddin Siddiqui brings enormous quiet dignity to a role that could have been a standard cop part. The film controls its information beautifully — you’re given clues but never enough to be certain — and its atmosphere of rain, rot, and concealed grief is maintained throughout with real skill.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated Launched directly on Netflix during the pandemic period when a flood of OTT releases made individual titles hard to track. The slow-burn pacing put off viewers expecting faster reveals. A film that truly rewards patience.

Best For: Murder mystery fans looking for a Bollywood whodunit that respects the genre’s craft.

DARK COMEDY

19. Serious Men (2020) — The Sharpest Bollywood Film About Class and Ambition

Director: Sudhir Mishra Cast: Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Nassar, Aakshath Das⭐ IMDb: 7.6🎬 Genre: Dark Comedy Drama / Social Satire📺 Watch on: Netflix

Ayyan Mani is a Dalit man working as an assistant to a brilliant but oblivious Brahmin scientist. Frustrated by a system that has no space for his own intelligence and ambition, he hatches an elaborate scheme — convincing the world that his young son is a genius child prodigy. Serious Men is a darkly funny, sharply observed film about caste, aspiration, and the lengths people will go to when legitimate routes are closed to them.

Nawazuddin Siddiqui is magnificent — morally compromised, deeply sympathetic, endlessly watchable. The film is based on Manu Joseph’s novel and adapted with intelligence and wit. It’s uncomfortable about caste in a way that few mainstream Bollywood films dare to be.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated Netflix OTT release with no theatrical run. Uncomfortable social subject matter. Dark tone without resolution. Lost in the streaming noise of 2020 — one of the most crowded OTT years in Indian cinema history.

Best For: Viewers who want a Bollywood film that engages seriously with caste, class, and the politics of intelligence.

PSYCHOLOGICAL DRAMA

20. Qala (2022) — The Most Underrated Bollywood Film of Recent Years

Director: Anvitaa Dutt Cast: Triptii Dimri, Babil Khan, Swastika Mukherjee⭐ IMDb: 7.5🎬 Genre: Psychological Drama / Musical📺 Watch on: Netflix

A classical singer in 1940s India climbs to fame while haunted by her relationship with a mother who never believed she was good enough — and by her own treatment of a male singer whose talent overshadowed hers. Qala is a gothic psychological drama about guilt, maternal rejection, and self-destruction, set against the lush backdrop of pre-independence Indian classical music.

Triptii Dimri gives a performance of extraordinary emotional range. Babil Khan — in his final released film — is heartbreaking. The music is gorgeous. The film is formally daring — it uses memory and hallucination as narrative tools in ways that Bollywood rarely attempts. It deserved to be talked about for months and was instead discussed for about a week before the next release cycle buried it.

🔍 Why It Was Underrated Period setting, female protagonist, psychological subject matter, and a non-linear structure — four elements that typically reduce mainstream commercial reach simultaneously. Released without significant promotion. A film that needs and deserves a second wave of discovery.

Best For: Anyone who enjoys psychological dramas, films about artistic ambition, and cinema with genuine visual and emotional ambition.


Why Do Great Bollywood Films Get Overlooked?

The pattern across almost every film on this list is consistent. Small or no marketing budget. Unconventional subject matter. No major star or an unconventional use of one. Release timing that clashed with bigger films or dropped into an overcrowded streaming window. And sometimes simply: a film that asked its audience to sit with discomfort rather than offering easy entertainment.

Bollywood’s commercial ecosystem is optimized for a specific kind of film. When something falls outside those parameters — even if it’s genuinely exceptional — it requires word of mouth and time to find its audience. The good news is that streaming has changed the equation significantly. Films that would have vanished permanently after a failed theatrical run now have a second life, a third, and sometimes a fourth as new viewers discover them.

Every film on this list has found that audience eventually. If you haven’t found them yet, now is the time.

Where to Start: Recommendations by Mood

If you want something genuinely scary and original — start with Tumbbad. If you want the best performance you’ve seen in years — watch Paan Singh Tomar or Aligarh. If you want a thriller that respects your intelligence — Talvar or Manorama Six Feet Under. If you want something that will make you laugh and break your heart at the same time — Ankhon Dekhi or Newton. And if you want the most joyful film on this entire list — Superboys of Malegaon.

Frequently Asked Questions — Underrated Bollywood Movies

What are the most underrated Bollywood movies on Netflix?

UglyTalvarHotel SalvationRaat Akeli HaiSerious MenQala, and Superboys of Malegaon are all on Netflix and worth watching immediately.

What are the most underrated Bollywood movies on Prime Video?

Prime Video has a strong collection of hidden gems including TumbbadManorama Six Feet UnderAligarhPaan Singh TomarTitliAnkhon DekhiPage 3Ek Hasina ThiShahidNewtonDhobi Ghat, and Stree.

Which underrated Bollywood film has the best IMDb rating?

TumbbadPaan Singh Tomar, and Ship of Theseus all hold an IMDb rating of 8.2 — among the highest on this list. Shahid and Talvar are close behind at 8.1.

Which is the most underrated Bollywood film of all time?

Many critics would argue Ugly (2013) or Ship of Theseus (2012) — both have exceptional ratings and craft but minimal public recognition. Paan Singh Tomar won the National Award and is still largely unknown to general audiences.

Are there underrated Bollywood films worth watching on MUBI?

Yes — Ship of Theseus is available on MUBI and is one of the most intellectually ambitious Indian films ever made. MUBI’s Indian cinema collection is generally excellent for discovering overlooked arthouse films.

Which underrated Bollywood thriller should I watch first?

Start with Talvar if you enjoy true crime, Manorama Six Feet Under if you love noir, or Raat Akeli Hai if you prefer classic whodunit mysteries. All three are available on streaming and require no prior Bollywood knowledge to enjoy.


Final Thoughts

The most underrated Bollywood movies on this list share one thing beyond their quality: they all trusted their audience. They didn’t simplify, they didn’t soften, and they didn’t add a crowd-pleasing song when the story didn’t need one. Some paid for that choice commercially. All of them endure because of it.

Streaming has given every one of these films a second chance — and in many cases, the audience they deserved all along. If even one film on this list is new to you, that’s a good evening sorted.

Which underrated Bollywood film do you think should have been a blockbuster? And which hidden gem from this list are you adding to your watchlist tonight? Tell us in the comments.

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