Shaun (Bharat) who served in the Navy is blind. He lives alone in a bungalow in a secluded mountain area. A gang of 4 members plan to rob his house thinking that there is black money in it. Each of them has a talent. Entering Shaun’s bungalow in the middle of the night, they have only 6 hours to escape before the early morning milkman arrives. The story of ‘Last Six Hours’ is whether they were able to steal and deceive the blind Shaun.
Uruguayan Pede Alvarez became a box office director in Hollywood with his 2013 film ‘Evil Dead’. The film is a sequel to his 2016 release ‘Don’t Breathe’. In the first half, the screenplay superficially depicts the lives of 4 members of a hi-tech theft gang. Thus, the scenes till the intermission lack any interest. The film heats up after they break into Shaun’s bungalow.
Sensing the strangers in the house, Shawn’s action-packed attack leaves us sitting up straight as he unsettles them. The unexpected twists and turns inside the house and the prequel unfolding before the end of the film are unexpected, but nothing new. Bharath is uncompromising in action as a blind ex-marine with a curvaceous eight-pack body. He acts well without much dialogue. Vivia’s acting is special in the startling character with 2 names Elizabeth and Rachel.
Anoop Khalid, Adil Ibrahim and Anu Mohan who come as other 3 friends do their assigned work properly. Sinu Siddharth’s cinematography draws us into the lonely bungalow. Kailash Menon’s background score also sounds thrilling. In a film influenced by successful English commercial cinema, it is essential to bring in regional character. This movie doesn’t care about that and makes our 2 hours too stressful.