What happens when you start blaming your conscience for everything wrong around you? You fear for your life, imagine yourself talking to the dead and see ghosts killing people. Sounds like a perfect script for a thriller, isn't it? But imagine when a weak screenplay mars this experience, and give you an average thriller in return with wafer-thin plot, predictable turns and unwanted twists. Alaya F's U-Turn is a blend of all this and more. Directed by Arif Khan, this happens to be the seventh remake of the 2016 Kannada film by the same name. This makes me ponder what different Khan could have done here to ensure his version still works. Surprisingly, though, the film works in parts and the broad storyline never seems that convincing, it still somehow manages to keep you hooked till the last scene for the sheer curiosity of finding who was the killer. Basically, why we would watch even the most average thriller till the endU-Turn chronicles the story of Radhika Bakshi (Alaya), an intern with a newspaper who is working on a story on the newly constructed NTPC flyover in Chandigarh where motorists remove the divider blocks to take a U-turn and don't put the blocks back, which leads to fatal accidents. Digging deep into the story, Radhika ends up interviewing some of these drivers who took a U-turn and on one night, when one of these motorists is found dead in his house, she ends up being the prime suspect. When police office Arjun Sinha (Priyanshu Painyuli) investigates the case, it is found that all other motorists that took a U-turn on that flyover in the last one year out of which some Radhika even met and interviewed, are dead. While the cops continue to suspect Radhika for all these murders, she just wants to prove herself innocent. Amid all this, there are supernatural activities which hint at a different story altogether.