Haunted 3D: Echoes of the Past
2026 Indian film by Vikram Bhatt
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Haunted 3D: Echoes of the Past is a 2026 Indian Hindi-language supernatural horror film written and directed by Vikram Bhatt. It is a spiritual sequel to the 2011 film Haunted – 3D and stars Mahaakshay Chakraborty (also known as Mimoh Chakraborty), Chetna Pande, Gaurav Bajpai, Hemant Pandey, Shruti Prakash, and Praneet Bhat. The film is produced by Anand Pandit, Shwetambari Bhatt and Rakesh Juneja with Mahesh Bhatt serving as a presenter.[3]
Shwetambari Bhatt
Rakesh Juneja
Chetna Pande
Gaurav Bajpai
Hemant Pandey
Shruti Prakash
Praneet Bhatt
Mannveer Choudharry
| Haunted 3D: Echoes of the Past | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Vikram Bhatt |
| Written by | Vikram Bhatt |
| Produced by | Anand Pandit Shwetambari Bhatt Rakesh Juneja |
| Starring | Mahaakshay Chakraborty Chetna Pande Gaurav Bajpai Hemant Pandey Shruti Prakash Praneet Bhatt Mannveer Choudharry |
| Cinematography | Naren A. Gedia |
| Edited by | Kuldip Mehan |
| Music by | Prateek Walia Nayeem-Shabir Puneet Dixit |
Production companies | Anand Pandit Motion Pictures Promoedge Media Pvt. Ltd. Vsb Pictures |
| Distributed by | Anand Pandit Motion Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 138 minutes |
| Country | India |
| Language | Hindi |
| Budget | ₹15 crore[1] |
| Box office | ₹7.73 crore[2] |
The film was released theatrically on 12 June 2026 and received negative reviews from critics.[4][5]
Plot
Dev and his cousin rents a palace far from the city as dev recently faced betrayal from his girlfriend. There, he is told that one side of the palace remains closed from inside and no-one dares to open it. But one night, dev finds the door open and enters where he finds sunahri, who had been waiting for him for long. She tells him that there is a shaitaan who can't see. Thereafter, dev learns that sunahri was trapped in the year 1870 and lives the same day after one complete 24 hour. Rest follows how dev protects sunehri from the trap of the shaitaan.
Cast
- Mahaakshay Chakraborty as Devadutt Choudhary/Dev
- Chetna Pande as Sunehri
- Gaurav Bajpai as Titu
- Hemant Pandey as Trilok
- Mannveer Choudharry
- Shruti Prakash as Yamini Jairam
- Praneet Bhat as Vikrat
- Sunil Shakya as Thanedaar
- Kruti Desai as Madara
Production
Following the success of their previous collaboration 1920: Horrors of the Heart, the trio of Mahesh Bhatt, Anand Pandit, and Vikram Bhatt reunited to create another horror film. The film is produced by Anand Pandit Motion Pictures and ASA Productions and Enterprises.[6]
Marketing
A teaser for the film was released on 3 September 2025, which received heavy criticism for its poor visual effects, evident green screen work, and artificial-looking backgrounds. In response to the backlash, the film was postponed and director Vikram Bhatt undertook 10 to 12 days of reshoots on real locations to improve the visual quality.[7] [8]
Release
Reception
Sana Farzeen of India Today gave 2.5 stars out 5 and said that "The film's mystery holds attention, but weak VFX and minimal scares limit its impact."[11] Bollywood Hungama rated it 2/5 stars and writes that "On the whole, HAUNTED – ECHOES OF THE PAST rests on a promising story but suffers due to a poor climax, underwhelming music and the excessive, tacky use of VFX and AI."[12]
Archika Khurana of The Times of India gave 2 stars out of 5 and said that "A horror sequel that remains haunted not by spirits, but by its inability to move beyond the formulas of the past."[13] Sreeju Sudharkaran, reviewing for Rediff.com rated it 1/5 stars and observed that "Haunted 3D: Echoes Of The Past has no real scares, no real acting, no real sets, no real drama, no real crows and no real 3D effects."[14]
Vinamra Mathur of Firstpost rated it 3/5 stars and stated that "Vikram Bhatt once again demonstrates his ability to create haunting worlds filled with emotional depth and supernatural intrigue. Fans of gothic horror and tragic love stories will find plenty to enjoy."[15] Troy Ribeirio of Free Press Journal rated it 2/5 stars and writes that "The film remains caught between nostalgia and reinvention. It offers atmospheric pleasures, earnest performances and moments of emotional sincerity, but its reliance on familiar genre machinery prevents it from becoming the haunting experience it aspires to be."[16]