Khakee- - The Bihar Chapter

The first two episodes are electric. The last two are tense and rewarding. But episodes 3 and 4 drag significantly, getting lost in repetitive negotiation scenes and procedural red tape. The show could have been a tight 5-episode series instead of 7.

Here’s a complete, in-depth review of (Netflix, 2022), written as a critical analysis of the series. Khakee: The Bihar Chapter – A Gritty, Flawed, Yet Riveting Descent into the Lawless Heartlands Verdict: A compelling, slow-burn police procedural that prioritizes grim atmosphere and moral ambiguity over explosive action. While it stumbles with pacing in the middle, it is anchored by a towering, terrifying performance by Avinash Tiwary as the antagonist and a stoic, believable turn by Karan Tacker as the conflicted IPS officer. Khakee- The Bihar Chapter

The women – Lodha’s supportive wife (played by Rituraj ), Mahto’s long-suffering mother, and a token journalist – are given little agency. They exist purely to reflect the men’s emotions. In a show that prides itself on realism, this feels like a glaring blind spot. The first two episodes are electric

Director Bhav Dhulia and writer Neeraj Pandey (who serves as showrunner) nail the texture of rural Bihar. The dusty bylanes, the thatched huts, the riverine landscapes, and the casual normalization of violence – it all feels lived-in. The show wisely avoids glamorizing the gangsters. Their power comes from fear and caste politics, not designer suits. The show could have been a tight 5-episode

Unlike a typical patriotic cop drama, Khakee asks tough questions. Lodha uses informants who are criminals, plays caste politics to win loyalty, and bends rules to corner Mahto. The series doesn’t present him as a saint, but as a flawed, ambitious man using a corrupt system to fight a bigger evil. This adds necessary depth.

★★★½ (3.5/5) The Premise: Good vs. Evil, Bihar-Style Based on real events from the mid-2000s, the series follows IPS Amit Lodha (Karan Tacker), an ambitious, Oxford-educated officer posted to the notorious Sheohar district in Bihar. His mission: to bring down the feared gangster-politician Chandradhar “Chandan” Mahto (Avinash Tiwary), a Brahmin overlord who rules with a cult of personality, caste dominance, and brutal violence. The show is a classic cat-and-mouse chase, but the lines between lawman and outlaw are deliberately blurred. The Good: What Works Brilliantly 1. Avinash Tiwary’s Chandan Mahto – An All-Time Great Villain Tiwary doesn’t just play a gangster; he embodies a wounded, arrogant, charismatic beast. He gives Chandan a Shakespearean complexity – a man who quotes poetry, loves his family ferociously, but will skin a rival alive without blinking. His silent stares, soft-spoken threats, and sudden eruptions of violence are genuinely unsettling. This is a villain you love to hate but can’t look away from.