Back in 2018, when Stree hit theatres, it felt like a breath of fresh (and spooky) air. A smart, funny, small-town horror-comedy that flipped the script — men were the ones hiding indoors, while a mysterious ghost woman prowled the streets. It was satire, it was scary, and it was surprisingly feminist.
But as the Maddock Horror-Comedy Universe (MHCU) has grown — with Roohi, Bhediya, Munjya, and now Thamma — something feels… off. The monsters keep getting bigger and the worlds more connected, but the “saviour” — that strong emotional center, a character to truly root for — never quite shows up.
The Birth of a Franchise
Producer Dinesh Vijan built something unique: a shared universe in Bollywood that blended horror with heartland humor. Each movie is linked through subtle cameos and post-credit crossovers, much like Marvel — but rooted in Indian folklore.
Stree set the tone with its perfect mix of scares and satire. Roohi continued that, Bhediya brought in VFX-heavy transformation scenes, Munjya mixed Marathi legend with modern comedy, and Thamma promises romance inside a supernatural setting.
The ambition is undeniable. The world-building is clever. But the soul — the saviour — feels missing.
Where’s the Hero?
Film critics and fans alike have noticed it: while these movies create vibrant mythologies, they rarely give us a true protagonist who rises above the chaos.
The ghosts and creatures drive the stories; the humans mostly react.
As writer Saraswati Datar noted in her piece for The Indian Express, the MHCU often “allows male stars to shine — but not necessarily to save.” Even when women lead (Stree, for instance), they’re treated more as symbols than as active agents of redemption.
It’s clever storytelling, yes. But without a clear emotional anchor, the stakes can feel oddly flat — the punchline lands, the monster vanishes, and we move on.
The Irony of It All
Here’s the twist: Stree, the movie that started it all, was literally about reclaiming women’s power. It mocked toxic masculinity and redefined who the real “monster” was.
Yet, as the universe expanded, that spark — that idea of an unexpected hero or saviour — got diluted in favor of spectacle.
Each sequel adds scale, but what we miss is that simple, satisfying redemption arc. A character who fights back — not just reacts.
What’s Next for the MHCU
Dinesh Vijan has hinted that Stree 3 will try something new and won’t repeat old beats. That’s promising. The upcoming slate (Thamma, Shakti Shalini, and others) shows Maddock Films isn’t short on imagination — just perhaps due for a little soul-searching.
Audiences love the universe. But love alone won’t keep it alive forever. To truly grow, the MHCU needs not just more “Strees,” but a saviour — someone, anyone, to carry the torch through the darkness.
Final Thought
The Maddock Horror-Comedy Universe remains one of Bollywood’s boldest experiments. It’s spooky, it’s smart, and it knows how to entertain. But beneath the laughter and jump-scares, there’s a hollow space waiting to be filled — by a hero who truly saves the day.
Until then, we’ll keep watching… and waiting.
