
“What’s great about making a film like Evil Eye is that you can play around with the genre elements,” says Elan. In the tradition of the best horror filmmakers, the Dassanis crafted innovative ways to frighten viewers using sound and image. Based on the audiobook by writer Madhuri Shekar, Evil Eye is directed by award-winning filmmakers Elan and Rajeev Dassani and co-produced by Priyanka Chopra Jonas and Jason Blum ( Get Out). I also didn’t enjoy the performance and found it kind of annoying.A seemingly perfect romance turns into a nightmare when a mother becomes convinced her daughter’s new boyfriend has a dark connection to her own past. I think some readers might enjoy the mystery or the interactions between the mother and daughter. There’s really nothing special here and I didn’t enjoy listening to it all that much. It was an okay story but very predictable.



This is one I really could have taken or leaven. I think the performance would have been a lot better either without them or with the sound decreased. I found the constant phone ringing sounds pretty annoying, they were louder than the rest of the audio and very distracting. The majority of this is book is told through phone conversations and voicemails. This is actually done as a full production audio performance with many characters doing voices. When her daughter finally meets the perfect Indian man, the mother has reservations. This is a supernatural thriller about an Indian mom who is pressuring her daughter to marry.

I got this from Audible for free as part of their two free Audible Originals per month deal for their members. In Madhuri Shekar’s ingenious Evil Eye, hilarious back-and-forth via phone and social media takes a shocking, supernatural twist when Pallavi meets the perfect man – leading to a climactic showdown that will leave listeners on the edges of their seats.” Her mother, Usha, is thousands of miles away in Delhi – and obsessed with finding her daughter a husband. “Pallavi is an aspiring writer living in California.
