


Poisoned perfumes, tapped phones, spies falling into steamy love affairs with their colleagues… In a world of elite espionage, these tactics are par for the course (we assume). In Khufiya, a thriller based on a true story about the underbelly of India’s intelligence community in the late ’90s, a savvy counterterrorism agent is tasked with finding the double-crosser responsible for her lover’s murder. Directed by Vishal Bhardwaj (Maqbool, Haider), the slow burn spy thriller stars Tabu, Ali Fazal, and Wamiqa Gabbi.




Check it out at the top of this article.
It’s the late ’90s, and relations between India and Pakistan have grown increasingly tense as both fight to establish a government in neighboring Bangladesh ahead of the next election. Pakistan’s ISI and India’s R&AW keep making attempts to undercut the other, and betrayals between the two agencies run rampant. But there’s another force at work — a traitor — who’s pulling the strings at both intelligence agencies.
Enter Heena, a R&AW spy known as Octopus, who’s about to kill a powerful ISI puppet named Mirza Sahib. At the last minute, his men thwart the assassination — and Mizra kills Heena instead. When Heena’s boss, Krishna, finds out, she’s furious. Not only was Heena a talented operative, she was also Krishna’s lover. Krishna, committed to avenging Heena’s death, goes on a mission to find the R&AW mole who had Heena killed: Ravi Mohan. Ravi, a dashing man who’s a model husband and a devoted employee, is not who he seems.
Yes, it’s based on a book Escape to Nowhere, written by the former Chief of the Counter Espionage Unit of R&AW, Amar Bhushan.
Yes, it’s based on real events. In the early 2000s, a whistleblower at India’s intelligence agency (R&AW) claimed that fellow agent Rabinder Singh was giving defense secrets to the US, threatening to jeopardize relations between the two countries. Bhardwaj’s adapted screenplay reworks the story to portray the whistleblower as a woman.
The film takes place in New Delhi, India, and Dhaka, Bangladesh. It was filmed in Mumbai and New Delhi.





















































