Indian Police Force Review :Indian Police Force Fails to Impress!

Indian Police Force Review: Rohit Shetty’s web series debut with ‘Indian Police Force‘ disappoints, offering a formulaic plot and lackluster execution. Read more about the series and its missed opportunities. 🎬👮‍♂️ #RohitShetty #IndianPoliceForce #WebSeries

Indian police force review
2/5

Cast: Sidharth Malhotra, Vivek Oberoi, Shilpa Shetty, Mayyank Taandon, Vibhuti Thakur, Nikitin Dheer, Isha Talwar, Sharad Kelkar, Shweta Tiwari, Vaidehi Parshurami

Creator: Rohit Shetty

Director: Rohit Shetty, Sushwanth Prakash

Streaming On: Amazon Prime

Language: Hindi

Runtime: 31-49 Minutes (7 Episodes)

Indian Police Force Review :Indian Police Force Fails to Impress!

The web series “Indian Police Force,” which is modeled after the popular cop-centric films of renowned Bollywood director Rohit Shetty, marks the director’s entry into the realm of web series. The Prime Video series, which is jam-packed with action-packed scenes, family-friendly moments, explosive explosions, and musical numbers, tries to distill the spirit of Shietty’s body of work but ultimately fails.

The show, which is helmed by Rohit Shetty and Sushwanth Prakash and features a screenplay by Sandeep Saket and Anusha Nandkumar, centers on two Delhi Police officers who work in tandem with a member of the Gujarat Anti-Terrorist Squad. Their goal was to capture an Indian Mujahideen member who was behind several bomb explosions. However, audiences are not engaged by the dull and predictable plot.

The main protagonists, Vikram (Vivek Anand Oberoi) and Kabir (Sidharth Malhotra) are chasing Zarar (Mayyank Taandan), a terrorist who is pretending to be a perfume vendor to his wife Nafeesa (Vaidehi Parushmani). The Iranian-born leader of Zarar, Rafeeq (Rituraj Singh), gives the plot a global scope.

The series lacks substance and, despite its attempt at tension, just briefly explores Haider’s radicalization without going into the reasons behind it. The narrative feels hurried and uninspired since there is a noticeable lack of the painstaking detail seen in Shetty’s works.

The conversation is dull, much like the story, and doesn’t bring any excitement to the show. Phrases like “Let’s find this ghost who bombs” and “Lupus a rare disease – rare like her” are uninteresting and add to the general tedium of the action scenes in the show.

With a past involving his wife Rashmi (Isha Talwar), Sidharth Malhotra’s character Kabir bears the brunt of the series, but he doesn’t make a lasting impression. Even Zarar, the antagonist who scatters corpses everywhere, finds it difficult to leave a lasting impression.

“Indian Police Force” seems antiquated and uninspired in comparison to more contemporary Tamil and Malayalam movies that have revolutionized the way that law enforcement is portrayed. The series’ poor attempt to produce an engaging policing drama is the result of its inability to convey the changing viewpoints on law enforcement that are evident in modern films.

“Indian Police Force” is Rohit Shetty’s first web series, however it doesn’t live up to the hype, giving an antiquated and unimpressive depiction of the police genre. The series lacks the passion and inventiveness required to stand out in the cutthroat field of web entertainment, appearing to be a clumsy continuation of Shetty’s profitable film model.