She seduces her director (Emraan Hashmi), and convinces him (while in bed) to be her ally in the witchcraft she plans on using against her sister. Shanaya meets an old man one day who takes her to meet an evil spirit which basically leads to a lot of evil things. Shanaya (Bipasha Basu) is a narcissistic actress, who has trouble coping with her loss of stardom and the success of her younger half-sister Sanjana (Esha Gupta). The rest of the film could have been slightly scary, if only Vikram Bhatt had bothered to plagiarize things correctly in the first place. Raaz 3's A certification applies, if anything, only to the sleazy sex scenes. Teeming with campy elements of 1990s horror, popularised by American classics like Wishmaster and Faust, Raaz 3 is a typical Vikram Bhatt outing that would do brilliantly in a small town where television shows like Aahat are a rage, if such places still exist. At least, Aahat was scary enough to stir up nightmares in the minds of impressionable children. So what would you get when you pair a rather mediocre director with a couple of mediocre actors? No prizes for guessing, you get a mediocre film best exemplified among this week's releases by Raaz 3. And Bipasha Basu and Emraan Hashmi aren't exactly in the running for an Oscar either. Pioneer of recent films such as Haunted and Dangerous Ishqq - both of which were critically received quite badly - Vikram Bhatt doesn't really qualify as an auteur. There is too much cliché, too much sleaze and too much predictability in Vikram Bhatt's Raaz 3, writes Preeti Arora.