The Ink-Stained Hand And The Missing Thumb Review | Yashasvi Juyal’s Inventive Debut Casts Grief Into Uncanny Reckonings

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Karlovy Vary Film Festival 2026 | The Proxima Competition entry fulfils the promise Juyal showed in his short films, striking a drama that's at once quietly surprising, funny, touching and brilliantly cheeky.

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Summary of this article
  • The Ink-Stained Hand and The Missing Thumb premiered at the Karlovy Vary Film Festival 2026.

  • Directed by Yashasvi Juyal, the film stars Dheeraj Kumar and Bhumika Dube as a co-workers and a couple struck by tragedy.

  • The film is selected in the Proxima competition strand.

Yashasvi Juyal’s debut feature, The Ink-Stained Hand and The Missing Thumb, situates itself between a yearning-infused wait and lingering tentativeness preceding a transition. Premiering at the Karlovy Vary Film Festival 2026 in Proxima Competition, Juyal’s film wields unearthly bewilderment with a grounded touch. Something bizarre happens early in the film, which Juyal handles credibly, playfully and also despairingly. It’s this tonal oscillation in response to an incredible event that makes this film metaphysically slippery and a tragicomic jewel.

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Santosh (Dheeraj Kumar) and Rajji (Bhumike Dube) are co-workers and lovers. They manage toll booths on a North Indian highway. There’s ample time to kill as their night shifts drag on; in between, one nudges the other for a glance or mild chatter. Their booths are on the same stretch. There have been differences between the couple regarding bracing for the near future. Conversation is suddenly halted one night when a truck crashes into Santosh’s booth. The explosion isn’t depicted but Dube’s face registers the jolt, the devastation surging in. Bereaved, Rajji isolates herself in her room. Grief is a peculiar thing, warping memory and imagination into projections.

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A surreal twist ensues. Resurrected, Santosh washes up on a river bank. But he’s dressed unlike himself. Is it him? Something in him has dislodged. Santosh’s uncanny return is startling until it enmeshes into the natural. There’s puzzled shock, disbelief, amusement, an impulse to vest him with divine proof. Questions swing into probing him about the day’s gap between his death and re-emergence. Where was he? Can he share what afterlife, though brief, was like? Those initially stunned gradually accept his return matter-of-factly. Life intervenes with its demands before people can continue wallowing in hesitance. Juyal seizes onto the absurdity with delicious abandon. Several emotion notes are struck in the return’s wake: mischief, resentment, grudging and everything rushing forth just as fine without Santosh. For some, his death also leads to opportunities.

The Ink-Stained Hand and the Missing Thumb sits languorously amidst silence, processing the unexpected even as we sense distressed undercurrents. There’s dignity and a calm understanding it trusts its characters with. They get pause to work through unresolved worries, reservations-mutually and individually.

Setting his film in the early aughts, Juyal flirts with liminal spaces, enfolded in the cracks of memory. Santosh arrives not so much as a ghost but a repossession of Rajji’s and his anxieties and clashing attitudes around the many places they keep scuttling through. He appears alien, distant and often retreating. Kumar is excellent in tapping a certain dislocation. Santosh mans this implacable front that abruptly splits into an odd laugh. There’s something mechanical how the interruption happens, a false evocation, a jarring switch. When he flips on his past merry self, the effect is disorienting.

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Rajji struggles to access his thoughts and moods as he sinks deep into himself. Is this what she sought? The ever-dependable Dube navigates mourning in all its denial, weary admission and inevitable confrontation. Her initial spell of relief on getting him back fades, replaced by more volatile feelings. Does she even want him? He’s aloof, disengaged while her pining grows confused in how to pivot itself. Mystical and sombre, the film acquires gravity while slowly pulling us in. Viraj Selot’s edit respects the momentousness, the intimacy of scenic design, swerving between sustained and drifting. Scenes are almost etherized with time being all floaty.

There’s also a thickening realisation of Rajji’s life and trajectory being somewhat stymied by his unwillingness to move away. Before death, he was hopeful of his contractual work being turned into a permanent post. She has ambitions that don’t align with his. She’s prepared to proceed whereas he baulks at moving. She has held back on leaving because of him. The sudden death hurls her into unspoken guilt. But his manifestation becomes a conduit for her to confront what she wants and must enact. The screenplay, which Juyal co-wrote with Ankit Thapa, is more interested in trailing the returned Santosh than sticking with Rajji. This bears mixed results. He’s very much an object of curiosity that has been flung askew. While absorbing his interactions, the film branches away from Rajji until a latter moment when it does remember her. Nevertheless, Dube brings enough ache and equivocation to buttress her character when she does go seeking answers.

As evidenced in his earlier short films, The Last Rhododendron and Rains Don’t Make Us Happy Anymore, Juyal is geared to landscapes, the stories they hold of people moving through time. Migration is central, animating the film’s uncertainties. He’s an avid chronicler of change and supposed development, how a place remains in its wake. The earth itself creaks. The radio news drone about landslides common in the region. In a subtle, sideways manner, there’s a lament here about the rapid march of urbanisation barging into a place, the erosion of its customs and a palpable personality itself.

In fact, the element of time finds passionate articulation. It opens the film and seeps right through it. In a particularly delightful indulgence, a scientist on a TV program, Professor Pluto (Sudarshan Juyal), deliberates on various iterations, experiences and approaches towards time. The illusion that time casts of being sequential is doubted in the opening itself, a key to the film’s inner logic. Juyal keeps returning to him.

The film doesn’t just linger but is far more intuitive to probe the blankness of temporal expanse. Characters don’t just occupy a space and a certain moment but are displaced and rent by hard decisions, dilemmas accompanying a move between places. Two people in a relationship can have entirely different perspectives towards time. At a later moment, one wonders, “What is home for workers like us anyway?”

A promise of reconstruction and renewal is constantly undone by the instability embedded within the work and rhythm of life. In contrast to the film’s forays into existential mobility, Dipesh Manral’s camera remains sedate, carefully holding each churning moment, be it a dawning realisation or a breakdown that slowly ripples into focus. There’s so much forlornness and loneliness Manral evokes in night-time scenes framing a bus stop in the middle of nowhere. Boxy compositions capture the town of Nagina as a strange site where lines between the real and fantasised blur. However, his camera gestures as much towards freedom and reclamation as it wanders with Rajji through a forest and by a stream. Working otherworldly intrusions into the very fabric of the everyday, The Ink-Stained Hand and the Missing Thumb is dazzling, singular and altogether unmissable. A promising new voice has shot onto the arena.

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