1920 Horrors of the Heart is an Indian horror film directed by Krishna Bhatt with production by Vikram Bhatt, Dr. Raj Kishor Khaware, Rakesh Juneja, and Shwetambari Bhatt, with a screenplay penned by Mahesh Bhatt. It is the fifth part in the 1920 film series. The primary actors are Avika Gor and Rahul Dev. Backing actors include Barkha Bisht, Randheer Rai, Danish Pandor, Ketaki Kulkarni, Avtar Gill, and Amit Behl.
The film has a few effective terrifying effects. Avika Gor makes an impression in certain sequences with her wonderful acting. Barkha Bisht nailed it as a lady who is concerned with everything that is going on adjacent to her.
The film is filled with horror dramas which struggle to appeal to a broad audience. There are also certain unpleasant shots that are unpleasant to see. Many scenes appear implausible because the filmmakers took great cinematic liberties. The script is loaded with ridiculous scenarios that are distant from actuality, thus there is little room for intriguing parts. Each section is a little sluggish and prolonged for no apparent explanation. The approach is the same, and it loses the audience’s attention.
Prakash Kutty’s videography is excellent. Puneet Dixit’s music is mediocre. The editing is good. Production and quality are great.The song about Randheer Rai’s persona is likewise bad. The primary flaws of this horror film are the lack of a solid storyline and the tranquil exposition in the second half.Though filmmaker Krishna Bhatt attempted to entice the audience by incorporating some solid scary sequences, she fell short of writing a strong tale and script.
The Times of India’s Abhishek Srivastava scored the film two out of five stars, writing that It’s amazing that so much has evolved in the last few decades, nevertheless Vikram Bhatt’s way of making scary movies remains stuck in antiquity. He subsequently passed the torch to his child, Krishna Bhatt, but the sense of freshness and real fright remains. The narrative of ‘1920: Horrors of the Heart’ is absurd and lacks to attract audiences. The liberties done and integrated into the plot constitute greater annoyance than amusement. The picture may have passed the test if the authors had made more work into establishing true moments of terror.
Bollywood Hungama rated the film 1.5 stars and stated, “Mahesh Bhatt and Suhrita Das’ screenplay sadly doesn’t do justice to the plot. Shweta Bothra’s dialogues are too filmy. Krishna Bhatt’s direction is not up to the mark. She handles a few scenes with panache. But otherwise, her execution is outdated. It doesn’t seem to be a film of 2023 and seems like this is a film made 2 decades ago”.