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Indian crime shows

minamino

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Are there any fans of Indian crime shows here? Most of them are based off real stories which just shows how disturbing the society of Indian rural areas is like Crime Patrol.
[MENTION=137142]JaDed[/MENTION] are you fan of such shows?
 
I remember when I was a kid this show CID was the rage
 
I remember when I was a kid this show CID was the rage

CID was family-friendly but shows like Crime Patrol and Savdhaan India are a bit more serious. Actors are really good as well, you would expect them to get better roles in Bollywood but they stay where they are.
 
Are there any fans of Indian crime shows here? Most of them are based off real stories which just shows how disturbing the society of Indian rural areas is like Crime Patrol.

[MENTION=137142]JaDed[/MENTION] are you fan of such shows?
Just love this genre!

Religiously watch all the episodes of Crime Patrol/Satark....
 
Are there any fans of Indian crime shows here? Most of them are based off real stories which just shows how disturbing the society of Indian rural areas is like Crime Patrol.

[MENTION=137142]JaDed[/MENTION] are you fan of such shows?
There are over 200 news channels in India,they need content to survive so they shifted focus to incidents happening in rural areas too otherwise no one would have bothered about these.
 
Well they are addictive for sure.. i can keep watching em esp crime patrol but they have an agenda I feel also never the shownpolice in negative light.

I remember the initial one in 90s was Bhanvar.. not sure if any data is available on it.

Byomkesh Bakshi I really liked.
 
Well they are addictive for sure.. i can keep watching em esp crime patrol but they have an agenda I feel also never the shownpolice in negative light.

I remember the initial one in 90s was Bhanvar.. not sure if any data is available on it.

Byomkesh Bakshi I really liked.
There was a very interesting crime show named as Police File Se, used to be aired on DD during late '80s. That was my initiation with crime shows.
 
Crime Patrol has come a long way now. Back in the day, it thrives on unwanted explicit scenes but now they have amazing and thrilling stories which would keep you on the edge of your seats. Anup Soni’s timely intervention and monologues make it better too.
 
Crime patrol no one comes close.

That show is damn addictive. Amazing storylines and twists and to think that they are based on real stories makes it more interesting and daunting at the same time. Some of the actors would put Bollywood stars to shame.
 
I used to watch CID many years back, and 3-4 years back I was sure not to miss a single episode of Crime Patrol.

Stopped watching since last 2 years

In Crime Patrol, episodes with Sanjeev Tyagi and Nisaar Khan were the best, followed by the Marathi Uncle Inspector

Best part In Tyagi Sir's episodes was when he slap some ruthless criminal who was not showing remorse

Nisar Khan had this ability to calmly interrogate suspects
 
[MENTION=146530]DeadBall[/MENTION] what do you think about Crime Patrol?
 
@<a href="http://www.pakpassion.net/ppforum/member.php?u=146530" target="_blank">DeadBall</a> what do you think about Crime Patrol?

Don't really watch these kinds of things but I think Abhishek Upmanyu's hilarious take on it should be pretty much spot on. Watch from 4:20 onwards.

 
I agree that the role of CDR and Khabris in Crime Patrol is very overrated. I watch it for the thrill and suspense even though some of the cases are really stupid as well.
 
Well they are addictive for sure.. i can keep watching em esp crime patrol but they have an agenda I feel also never the shownpolice in negative light.

I remember the initial one in 90s was Bhanvar.. not sure if any data is available on it.

Byomkesh Bakshi I really liked.

Tehkiqat?
 
Don't really watch these kinds of things but I think Abhishek Upmanyu's hilarious take on it should be pretty much spot on. Watch from 4:20 onwards.

So true about Police absolute agenda driven, lot of religious stuff too.
Also Abhishek is amazing , I liked him more when he was not this groomed, hopefully can catch him in Texas during March.

Sumit Anand is another remarkable one..
 
Tehkiqat?

Saurabh Shukla is amazing.. I really like him a lot and want him to suceed as an actor, I don’t remember all episodes but IIRC one where they show the chair moving and it was being done by the person living downstairs.
It was before my time though.
 
Forced myself to finish the first season of Mirzapur. Never plan on starting the second
 
Forced myself to finish the first season of Mirzapur. Never plan on starting the second

Its for an Indian audience and heavily inspired I don’t feel to start the second season as well coz i didn’t enjoy the first one, Patal Lok (amazon) is good though.. would recommend that, also Made in Heaven tried.. but something seemed missing probably the lead actress was very dull for me.

Pitchers , Panchayat , Yeh hai meri Family are the best Indian webseries imo.
 
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Delhi crime vs Patal Lok surprisingly both in Delhi? lol Crime capital of India eh.
 
In my teenage years, I remember watching Special Squad. I really loved it. It was wonderfully directed and all the episodes were intriguing.
 
For Indian crime show, go no further than to Crime Patrol/Satark. Great acting and attention to detail as to how the most complex and blind cases are solved by Crime branch officials.
 
Saurabh Shukla is amazing.. I really like him a lot and want him to suceed as an actor, I don’t remember all episodes but IIRC one where they show the chair moving and it was being done by the person living downstairs.
It was before my time though.

I was a kid then. That was probably the most horrifying thing. I couldn't sleep for days after watching that chair moving episode.

Did you see ahat and I can't remember the shows name but it started with S.... it was even better than ahat. It was on Sony.
 
I was a kid then. That was probably the most horrifying thing. I couldn't sleep for days after watching that chair moving episode.

Did you see ahat and I can't remember the shows name but it started with S.... it was even better than ahat. It was on Sony.

Shhhhh... koi hai
 
Nope. I remembered. Sannata. Have you watched it? There was particularly an intriguing episode where a car kills it's owners.

Tulsi Ramsay was king of horror and supernatural shows in 80 and 90s. His shows gave nightmare to children but obviously later it seems funny when you grow up. Ofcourse it does not come in crime category
 
I was a kid then. That was probably the most horrifying thing. I couldn't sleep for days after watching that chair moving episode.

Did you see ahat and I can't remember the shows name but it started with S.... it was even better than ahat. It was on Sony.

Yeah that’s why it is one of the most iconic scenes for me I dont know if it was copied from hollywood but so much of work in 90s was excellent in TV.
 
A career threatening incident, even grave if he is actually behind it
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Model Found Dead In Surat, Police To Send Notice To IPL Star​

Police investigating the suspected suicide of model Tania Singh will send a notice to cricketer Abhishek Sharma as the preliminary probe revealed the duo was friends and she had sent him a message on WhatsApp chat which was not responded to, a Surat police officer said on Wednesday. Singh, 28, was found hanging from the ceiling of her apartment in Vesu area of the city on Monday. No suicide note was found, police said.

"We have so far learnt this much that Abhishek Sharma was in friendship with the deceased model. More details will be known in the investigation," said Assistant Commissioner of Police VR Malhotra.

Preliminary investigation revealed that the model had sent Sharma a message on WhatsApp chat but it was not responded to, he said.

"We have not contacted Abhishek Sharma yet but we will send him a notice," the ACP added.

Speaking about the investigation, he said the police are verifying the CDR (Call Detail Record) and IP Detail Record (IPDR) data of the model's phone.

"After verification, we may call the persons whose names come up during verification for recording their statements, if required," he added.

An all-rounder, Sharma plays for Sunrisers Hyderabad in the Indian Premier League (IPL).

The deceased Singh had a decent fan following on social media platforms.

A case of accidental death was registered at Vesu police station and further investigation is underway.

Source: NDTV
 
It is not a show but a season worth watching. Delhi Crime. Wonderful season based on a real incident.
 
Comeback of 1990s Indian crime drama evokes nostalgia

"Daya, darwaaza tod do." (Daya, break down the door)

Most Indians will instantly recognise this dialogue from the popular detective show CID, which ran from 1998 to 2018, making it one of India's longest-running television shows.

The whodunnit featured three intrepid policemen - ACP Pradyuman, inspector Daya and inspector Abhijeet - solving case after case, as no criminal was ever a match for them. The low-budget episodes had comically simple plots, iffy acting, and all it took for a suspect to confess was a good slap from ACP Pradyuman.

But over the years, the show has achieved cult status, and its characters and dialogues have spawned a wealth of jokes, memes and reels.

CID is set to return later this month, sparking mixed reactions among its fans. Some are eager to see the three policemen back in action but others say that the show's old-world charm might not fit in with the gritty realism of modern-day crime shows.

Over the past few days, the creators of the show have been releasing teasers for upcoming episodes on Instagram, each garnering hundreds of thousands of likes and comments.

Apart from the three main characters, the teasers feature familiar tropes and dialogues. These include Inspector Daya kicking open doors to reveal a suspect's hideout and ACP Pradyuman muttering his iconic line, 'kuch toh gadbad hai, Daya' (something's not right, Daya), signaling to both his team and the audience that a crime has taken place.

Trisha Shah, 35, a content creator from Mumbai and a fan of the show, says that the teasers make her nostalgic.

"CID was one of the few crime shows on television back then and my parents didn't mind me watching it because of its family-friendly content," Ms Shah says.

"Despite being a crime show, it never showed gruesome violence, sexual crimes, foul language or anything that was not suitable for family viewing."

In an interview to Film Companion, an entertainment journalism platform, one of the writers of the show said that they even avoided giving surnames to the characters to avoid hurting anyone's sentiments.

But the show's outlandish plots more than made up for its primness, whether that was ACP Pradyuman coming back from the dead or inspector Daya single-handedly manoeuvring a poison-gas filled plane to safety.

In an interview to Forbes magazine, the producer of the show, BP Singh, described these scenes and plots as "believable nonsense".

"You may later laugh at it [the scene]. But for those five minutes, it is so engrossing that you don't mind it," he told the magazine.

In a rather comical fashion, the characters would also explain plots and technologies used to solve crimes through their dialogues, making it easy for even children to grasp what was happening.

"The bad guys always got caught and that was comforting to watch," Ms Shah says. "I don't think I'll enjoy the show today, but back then, it was a big deal."

In the 1990s, TV was a big deal as it was the only form of home entertainment. At the start of the decade, India eased broadcasting rights, making more channels available.

"Initially, channels like Star began showing reruns of American shows like Baywatch and The Bold and The Beautiful. But new entrants like Zee TV and Sony began producing original shows to cater to the Indian audience," says Harsh Taneja, an associate professor of media at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

Producers often adapted Western shows for Indian audiences by importing format Bibles - guidelines outlining story structure - and modifying them for local context, he says. So, a show like CID often featured plots that closely resembled those of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, an American crime drama.

The 1990s and 2000s saw television become a staple in households as people's spending power grew. Many homes had not just one but two televisions, leading producers to create content targeting different age groups, says Mr Taneja.

Interestingly, the target audience of CID, when it was released in the 1990s, was children in the age group of six to 14. After CID, several other crime-focussed shows began to populate channels - from Crime Patrol to Savadhan India. But one could say that it was CID that created an appetite for crime shows among viewers.

Priya Ravi, 40, remembers waiting eagerly for each CID episode to air when she was a child. She confesses that it was the show that made her push her parents to get a television set at their home.

"Episodes used to air twice a week, and initially I used to go to a friend's place to watch them. But then I convinced my parents to get a TV so that I could watch the episodes at home. I was so happy the day the TV arrived," Ms Ravi says.

She says that though she won't watch the new CID episodes, she'll definitely encourage her two children, aged seven and nine, to watch them.

"If the show remains as clean as it was back in the day, I think it's a great way to introduce children to some of the realities of life and make them vigilant about their safety and surroundings," she says.

"I'm looking forward to the heroic trio making a comeback."

BBC
 
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