Year: 2016
Runtime: 148 mins
Language: Hindi
Director: Tinu Suresh Desai
A decorated naval officer and devoted family man finds his world shattered when he discovers his wife is having an affair with a wealthy businessman. After confronting the man and fatally shooting him, the officer surrenders to the police, maintaining his innocence in court. His unexpected claim shocks the businessman’s sister and the officers investigating the case, leading to a surprising legal battle.
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Read the complete plot breakdown of Rustom (2016), including all key story events, major twists, and the ending explained in detail. Discover what really happened—and what it all means.
In 1959 Bombay, Rustom Pavri, a respected Indian Navy commander, enjoys a stable, close-knit life with Cynthia Pavri. It’s a relationship built on years of mutual trust, still feeling fresh twelve years after India’s hard-won independence from British rule. But that quiet happiness begins to fracture when a troubling truth surfaces: Cynthia has been entangled with Vikram Makhija, a man who tests the limits of their bond and trust. The moment of crisis arrives when [Rustom] discovers Vikram’s intimate letters hidden in Cynthia’s cupboard, and he witnesses the two of them together, an image that unsettles the foundation of his world.
Shaken, [Rustom Pavri] reaches for a pistol kept on the naval ship’s armory rack and makes a trunk call to K. M. Bakshi at the Defence Secretariat in New Delhi. He then sets off to locate Vikram, first to Vikram’s workplace at Imperial Motors and then to Vikram’s home, intent on understanding what has gone wrong. The sequence culminates in Vikram’s bedroom, where a servant hears three gunshots and enters to find Vikram dead and [Rustom] departing with the firearm in hand. In a decisive turn, [Rustom] surrenders to the Bombay police, and Senior Inspector Vincent Lobo begins the formal investigation.
The tragedy ripples through Vikram’s circle, and Vikram’s sister, Priti Makhija, seeks the toughest possible outcome for Rustom from the public prosecutor, Lakshman Khangani. Unwilling to be steered or aided by others, Rustom chooses to stand his ground and fights the case on his own, even requesting custody rather than accepting a passive defense. In the background, Rear Admiral Prashant Kamath—Rustom’s senior naval officer—tries to shield sensitive information, sending two men to the Pavri residence to recover crucial documents, though they fail to unearth anything.
Meanwhile, Cynthia confides in Rustom’s side of the story in jail, explaining the loneliness she felt while he was away in London for months. She reveals that Vikram exploited her vulnerability, and although she had attempted to end the affair, the pain lingered. With mounting agitation and the weight of the truth, Cynthia begins to coerce Kamath for money, attempting to extract ₹5 crore in exchange for the vital documents that could bolster Rustom’s case, an action that throws more shadows over everyone involved.
As the trial progresses, Rustom unexpectedly pleads not guilty in front of Judge Patel, and a 9-member jury is charged with delivering the verdict. The courtroom atmosphere is tense, and the proceedings hinge on the unseen threads of the trunk call and the political pressures surrounding the Navy’s integrity. In Bombay, the case deepens when Lobo is in New Delhi and meets Bakshi to obtain the recording of that trunk call, a piece of the puzzle that had not been disclosed during the hearing. The moral weight of the story grows heavier as the truth behind these recordings comes to light, challenging everyone to re-evaluate what they believe about loyalty, justice, and honor.
On the eve of judgment, [Rustom Pavri] reveals a deeper, long-buried truth: during a London posting in 1958, he inspected an aircraft carrier the Navy hoped to purchase. Vikram, who was lobbying for the carrier’s acquisition, and Kamath allegedly tried to bribe him to declare the carrier seaworthy. When [Rustom] attempted to warn Bakshi from abroad, Bakshi likewise attempted to influence him, and Vikram’s extortionate schemes unfolded through Cynthia. In a moment of righteous anger, Vikram’s manipulation backfired; Rustom made the only choice he could in defense of the Navy’s integrity. He then asserts that he never possessed documents proving the carrier’s damage, a confession that reframes the entire investigation.
The verdict finally comes: the jury declares Rustom not guilty, a moment that fills the courtroom with tears and relief as he and Cynthia step out into the light. Yet the case does not end there. In the background, Bakshi’s corruption surfaces in half-truths and half-recordings, and the pressure around Kamath intensifies, driving Bakshi to suicide to avoid further exposure. With the legal battle resolved but the moral questions lingering, Rustom and Cynthia embark on a quiet vacation, their spirits buoyed by vindication and a sense of restored dignity. The Navy receives a glimmer of hope as INS Vikrant begins to take shape anew, and Rustom learns of the future carrier’s robust condition—news that reinforces his long-awaited sense of justice, even as he reflects on the personal price paid along the way.
Last Updated: October 09, 2025 at 16:00
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