Updated On: 29 August, 2021 07:50 AM IST | Mumbai | Mayank Shekhar
The madness of this movie, about a non-existent case in a fake trial, is nothing compared to what Chakraborty had to go through herself

A still from Chehre
A sales representative, whose car breaks down during a trip, finds lodging for the night in a house of a retired judge. The host invites him to participate in a game that the judge and his three friends—a former prosecutor, a defense attorney, and a public hangman—play over dinner. The game in question is a pretend-trial, in which he [the sales rep] will be defendant. During cross-question, it transpires that he may have caused death of his boss by heart attack…”
I could obviously carry on writing—plus revealing inadvertently spoilers after spoilers—over what reads like the story of this film, Chehre. Except, I’ve only quoted from the Wikipedia page, word for word, the plot summary thus far—of Friedrich’s Durrenmatt’s novel, A Dangeorous Game (1956).