Seat Edge Movie Review: From Clickbait Laughs to Creeping Fear
Modified On: 31 January 2026 | Reviewed By: Team MoviekoopSeat Edge Movie Review:⭐⭐⭐★★[3 / 5] From Clickbait Laughs to Creeping Fear


Seat Edge Movie Story-line : Seat Edge tracks Siddu (Siddu Moolimani), an IT professional chasing YouTube fame after quitting his job. With help from his loyal friend Raghu (Raghu Ramanakoppa), Siddu dabbles in food vlogs and viral trends, only to land in trouble after a promotion goes wrong and attracts police attention from Shambunath (Girish Shivanna). When romance with Nandini (Raviksha Shetty) falters and fake ghost videos expose his shortcuts, Siddu makes a reckless choice—venturing into a real ghost town to prove himself. What begins as a breezy comedy about internet ambition slowly morphs into a horror thriller once he enters the cursed space.
Review: eat Edge follows Siddu (Siddu Moolimani), a young IT professional who walks away from a secure career to chase internet stardom. Armed with enthusiasm and backed by his loyal friend Raghu (Raghu Ramanakoppa), a yoga instructor with unshakeable faith in Siddu’s dreams, he experiments with every trending YouTube format—from daily vlogs to food reviews—hoping one of them will click. Their eagerness often overrides caution, and trouble arrives when a restaurant they promote causes food poisoning, dragging Siddu into a police inquiry with Shambunath (Girish Shivanna), a no-nonsense cop who is ironically a content creator himself. A warning later, Siddu is back to square one, desperate for a breakthrough.
Running alongside this is a romantic thread involving Nandini (Raviksha Shetty), an aerobics trainer from Raghu’s studio. As Siddu’s content ideas keep failing, he notices the explosive popularity of ghost-hunting videos and begins fabricating paranormal encounters using CGI. When Nandini discovers the deception, she is disillusioned by his shortcuts and lack of integrity. Determined to redeem himself and regain her trust, Siddu decides to prove his courage by venturing into a notorious ghost town—an abandoned place whispered about for its intense paranormal activity and a history no one has survived.
The film’s first half is largely playful, leaning into situational comedy, friendship, romance, and sharp jabs at influencer culture and viral desperation. The horror is intentionally held at bay, making the tonal shift in the second half more striking. Once Siddu enters the ghost town, the narrative darkens. Dilapidated houses, eerie artefacts, unsettling sounds, and violent past secrets form the familiar grammar of horror cinema, and at times the film does tread known territory.
However, Seat Edge finds its edge through inventive ideas. A particularly intriguing ghost character, obsessed with puzzles and psychological traps, adds an engaging twist. Instead of relying solely on jump scares, the film plays with looping spaces, mind games, and mental endurance, which heightens tension and sustains interest. These moments elevate the horror and give the film a distinct identity despite its familiar setting.
Performances are uniformly solid, with the cast handling both comedy and fear convincingly. Technically, the film supports its genre shift well, using sound design and visual mood to reinforce the creeping dread of the latter half.
Verdict: Seat Edge starts as a breezy satire on digital fame and gradually transforms into a focused horror thriller. While not groundbreaking, its clever ideas and tonal evolution make it a worthwhile watch for those who enjoy horror rooted in contemporary anxieties.
Free Movie Tickets Contest currently active on Moviekoop.
Hindi,Telugu,Tamil,Malayalam,Kannada | 19 March 2026
Hindi,Telugu,Tamil,Malayalam,Kannada | 19 March 2026
Telugu | 27 March 2026
Hindi,Telugu,Tamil,Malayalam,Kannada | 21 August 2026
Movie Reviews:
O’ Romeo Movie Review: A Dark Symphony of Love and Blood
Seat Edge Movie Review: From Clickbait Laughs to Creeping Fear
Fashion:
Trending:

Rishab Shetty’s Jai Hanuman Muhurat to Be Held at Anjanadri Betta
Chatha Pacha Gears Up for Netflix Premiere on February 19
O’ Romeo Movie Review: A Dark Symphony of Love and Blood
