Box office The film collected nett in its first week.
Critical reception The film has a
Rotten Tomatoes rating of 93% with an average score of 7.6/10 based on 14 reviews, 13 of which are positive ("fresh").
Jay Weisberg wrote that "the film plunges into [a] pitiless milieu with headstrong assurance, presenting a paternalistic world where corruption seeps into people's pores and women need backbones of steel to survive", calling it "a grittily impressive debut".
The Hollywood Reporter's Deborah Young praised
Namrata Rao's editing and Behl for "directing a largely non-pro cast, situating them carefully in the squalor of their Delhi surroundings." She called the film "an enjoyable, character-driven Indian yarn about an emotional family of criminals [that] gets better as it goes on." Brad Mariano of
4:3 "Recommended" the film, calling it "an impressive debut that is far from what one might expect from the Indian cinema", noting the influence of
Pier Paolo Pasolini's
neo-realism and the "complex, impossible moral situations" of
Asghar Farhadi's films. He ended his review by calling it "a gripping debut film that could mark the arrival of a significant new voice in world cinema." J Hurtado of
Screen Anarchy wrote that while "scenes of people scraping the bottom of the barrel are nothing new in Hindi independent cinema, [...] Behl's treatment of the material is both heart-wrenching, and vividly relatable as everyone tries to make out the best way they can without leaving anything on the table." He called it "a film about hope, and it's overwhelming sadness only makes the hope shine brighter", despite its "dark"-ness and its "low opinion of some of those people who populate Delhi's backstreets." Rohit Vats of
Hindustan Times called it "the best Hindi film of the year so far", giving it a perfect score of 5/5. He wrote that the film-makers "don't keep you at an objective distance. They challenge you to stop ignoring the so-called social blots, and once you're sucked in, they make you believe that the injustice behind the rough exterior is systematic." Uday Bhatia of
LiveMint called the film "unrelentingly grim, morally unmoored". He wrote that the "emotional and physical violence in Titli is wince-inducing, but even more oppressive is the atmosphere of mistrust and desperation that Behl and his co-writer Sharat Katariya build up." A more mixed review came from
Filmfare's Rachit Gupta who called the film "a little too blunt and all too intentionally" despite its "serious" themes.
International Film Festivals attended •
2014 Cannes Film Festival • 5th
Beijing International Film Festival • 13th
Indian Film Festival of Los Angeles •
Melbourne International Film Festival • Rio de Janeiro International • International Film Festival of Colombo •
Zurich Film Festival •
Filmfest Hamburg •
Festival international du film indépendant de Bordeaux (Fifib) •
BFI London Film Festival •
Chicago International Film Festival •
Philadelphia Film Festival • Seattle South Asian Film Festival •
Hawaii International Film Festival • San Francisco International South Asian Film Festival (SFISAFF) by 3rd-i Films • AFI Fest, Los Angeles • South Asian International Film Festival (SAIFF), New York • Black Movie Festival, Geneva •
International Film Festival Rotterdam, Netherlands •
Gothenburg Film Festival, Sweden • Festival du film d'Asie du Sud Transgressif (FFAST), Paris •
Gijón International Film Festival, Spain ==Awards==