HomeEntertainmentGyaarah Gyaarah Review: A Promising Premise Elevated By Raghav Juyal’s Spunk, Diminished By Melodrama

Gyaarah Gyaarah Review: A Promising Premise Elevated By Raghav Juyal’s Spunk, Diminished By Melodrama

Gyaarah Gyaarah review: While Gyaarah Gyaarah does have a promising premise, the show ends up wasting its potential with the predictable reveals and frankly, little innovation. Raghav Juyal’s candour and wit is the only saving grace of this exhausting eight episode watch.

August 08, 2024 / 08:56 IST
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Gyaarah Gyaarah releases on August 9.
Gyaarah Gyaarah releases on August 9.

Imagine a police officer who, instead of beating the protestors with lathis, defies the orders of his seniors and joins them in their fight for justice. Imagine a police officer who, despite being a subordinate, calls out the seniors in his department, accuses them of being corrupt and holds power to account (and throws some hilarious zingers while he is at it).

Yug Arya (played by Raghav Juyal) is immensely watchable in the eight-episode-long (!!!) investigative drama which is too melodramatic and soap-opera-esque to be taken seriously. Juyal's comic timing, coupled with his deadpan expression and candour is what makes the show watchable, even if the melodrama takes much of the seriousness away.

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Gyaarah Gyaarah: Plot

An eleven-year-old Aditi Tiwari is abducted at a Dusshera mela in November 2001. She is murdered in cold blood; her body recovered from the sea. Investigating the case is Inspector Athwal (Dhariya Karwa), whose overbearing senior berates him for not being able to close the investigation on time. Reluctantly, Athwal agrees to frame a medical student Raghav Nautyal for the murder, even though the student himself is murdered in cold blood (which is made to look like a suicide).