Welcome to the Least Comforting Pediatric Ward on Earth
On paper, Bali sounds like a solid little horror setup:
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Widowed dad
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Sickly seven-year-old son
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Creepy old hospital
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Mysterious nurse only the kid can see
That’s a decent starter pack right there. But somehow, Vishal Furia’s Bali manages to take “scary hospital” and turn it into “extended waiting room montage with occasional jump scares and emotional blackmail.”
If you’ve ever wondered what it would be like if an episode of a medical soap got drunk, put on a white bedsheet, and insisted it was a horror movie, congrats: this is your answer.
Dad, Son, and the Case of the Terminally Boring Haunting
We’ve got Shrikant Sathe (Swapnil Joshi), a widower just trying to keep his life afloat. He runs a small tailoring shop, dotes on his son, and wears that constant “one more bad day and I’m done” expression many horror dads specialize in.
His son, Mandar, is a typical seven-year-old in horror-movie terms: cute, chatty, and absolutely destined to start talking to things no one else can see. One day, Mandar suddenly faints, and Shrikant rushes him to a hospital for tests.
So far, so reasonable. Then the plot checks into the hospital and never really leaves—emotionally, physically, or creatively.
Mandar ends up being admitted for “observation,” which in horror language means:
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His father will pace around looking haunted.
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Doctors will vaguely mutter about tests.
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The hospital’s power bill will somehow not include hallway lighting.
Things take a spooky turn when Mandar starts talking to a mysterious nurse—someone he swears lives in the deserted wing of the hospital. You know the one: abandoned, unstaffed, poorly lit, probably not approved by any health department, and therefore obviously full of child-appropriate paranormal content.
Instead of prioritizing medical protocols, Bali leans into this setup with all the delicacy of a sledgehammer, and the story slowly deflates like a punctured IV bag.
The Nurse Who May or May Not Exist (And May or May Not Be Interesting)
Mandar insists he’s talking to a nurse—friendly, caring, definitely real as far as he’s concerned. She’s the emotional anchor for his lonely, scared little self. She also… does basically nothing particularly original as a horror presence.
You’d expect a ghost nurse to have some flair:
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Bloodstained uniform
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Weirdly specific rules
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Unsettling knowledge
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Supernatural interventions
Here, she mostly functions as an off-screen excuse for Mandar to act strange and creep his dad out. She’s less a character and more a plot device with a stethoscope.
The movie tries to build ambiguity—Is she real? Is Mandar hallucinating? Is this medical, psychological, or supernatural?—but it doesn’t commit hard enough to any lane to generate real tension. Everything feels half-hearted: half-hospital drama, half-ghost story, zero full-blooded anything.
Shrikant: Professional Worrier, Amateur Detective, Occasional Scream Fodder
Swapnil Joshi does his best as Shrikant, but the script gives him one main task: “look stressed and increasingly confused.” He spends most of the film:
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Agonizing over medical bills
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Pleading with doctors for answers
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Trying to convince people something’s wrong
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Yelling Mandar’s name down dim hospital corridors
It’s not that a father’s desperation isn’t compelling—it is, in the right hands. But Bali doesn’t really explore Shrikant as a complex person so much as it uses him as an emotional punching bag. Widowed? Check. Financially strained? Check. Kid mysteriously ill? Check. Also possibly haunted? Double check.
Instead of using those layers to deepen the horror, the film just piles them on for extra sympathy points. It’s like the script is constantly whispering, “Feel bad yet? Good, now here’s a loud sound cue.”
Dr. Radhika, The Most Chill Doctor in a Haunted Building
Pooja Sawant plays Dr. Radhika Shenoy, the doctor assigned to Mandar’s case. She’s calm, controlled, and seems to be the only person in the building vaguely aware that medical ethics exist.
Unfortunately, she’s also stuck in a script that uses her primarily to:
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Deliver medical exposition
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Skeptically dismiss paranormal explanations
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Then gradually reconsider once things get weird enough
You’ve seen this character a hundred times, usually written better. She could’ve been the grounded counterpoint to Shrikant’s spiraling panic, but the film never really lets her drive the narrative. She remains a supporting function instead of a genuine second perspective, which is a shame—because the movie badly needs another point of view that isn’t just “confused dad and spooky kid.”
Hospital Horror Without the Pulse
Horror set in hospitals can be bang-on effective:
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You’re vulnerable
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Surrounded by sickness
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Under harsh lighting
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Dependent on strangers
Bali understands the surface of that but never digs deeper. Instead, it treats the hospital mostly as:
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A bunch of dark hallways
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A conveniently creepy abandoned wing
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A place where staff disappear whenever the plot needs Shrikant to run around alone
The pacing doesn’t help. The film stretches its simple premise to feature length without enough new ideas to sustain it. So we get:
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Repeated scenes of Shrikant begging for answers
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Repeated shots of Mandar nervously talking to empty spaces
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Repeated hints that something terrible happened in the hospital’s past
By the time the “big reveals” arrive, you’re less shocked and more mildly relieved something is finally happening.
Twists That Feel Like Admin Errors
Of course there’s a tragic backstory behind the ghostly nurse and the spooky wing. Of course it involves past patients, negligence, possibly a dead child, and a whole lot of guilt soaking the walls like spilled disinfectant.
The issue isn’t having a twist—it’s that Bali’s twists feel like they were copied from the “generic horror templates” folder and then accidentally stapled in the wrong order. You can see them coming from very early on.
You sit there thinking:
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“There’s definitely some unfinished business ghost logic coming.”
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“This ‘mysterious’ nurse is absolutely tied to the hospital’s past.”
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“Shrikant’s personal tragedy is definitely going to get drag-and-dropped into this haunting somehow.”
And the movie obliges. Dutifully. Predictably. With all the surprise of a lab test result that says “yep, still boring.”
Cheap Scares, Emotional Heavy-Handedness
Where Bali really stumbles is its balance between horror and sentiment. It leans hard into:
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Sad widowed father
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Vulnerable child
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The fear of losing your last remaining family member
These are powerful emotional triggers, and the script knows it. But instead of building a nuanced emotional-horror blend, it just keeps pressing the “feel bad for them” button while tossing in random supernatural jolts.
A door slams.
Shrikant cries.
Mandar looks pale.
The nurse maybe appears.
Shrikant cries harder.
It starts to feel manipulative in a lazy way. You’re not horrified; you’re just mildly exhausted from being repeatedly nudged and told, “Hey, this is tragic, okay? TRAGIC.”
Wasted Potential Diagnosis: Chronic Underachievement
The sad part is: Bali honestly could’ve been good. The ingredients are there:
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A strong father-son emotional core
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A naturally unnerving setting
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A ghostly figure tied to hospital trauma
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An exploration of grief, guilt, and medical fear
But the film never commits to anything beyond the baseline. It’s like it was content to be “fine background streaming content” instead of aiming for “memorable horror.”
Instead of:
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Deepening the mythology of the ghost
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Letting Radhika and Shrikant clash on science vs. superstition in a meaningful way
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Giving Mandar more agency or inner life
We get a lot of running, crying, whispering, and conveniently placed jump scares.
Final Report: Condition Stable, But Barely Worth Reviving
Bali isn’t offensively bad. It’s competently shot, the performances are serviceable, and if you throw it on in the background while scrolling your phone, you’ll absorb enough of it to vaguely follow along.
But as a horror film? It flatlines.
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It’s not scary enough to be chilling.
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Not weird enough to be interesting.
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Not emotionally sharp enough to be haunting.
It sits in that uncanny middle zone of “almost something,” surrounded by better films about haunted hospitals, creepy kids, and grief-driven hauntings.
If you’re a diehard Marathi cinema fan or a Swapnil Joshi completist, sure, give it a watch. Everyone else? Consider this a gentle nudge to discharge yourself early. There are scarier, smarter horror films in the streaming ward. No need to haunt this one.
