Indian Police Force by Rohit Shetty 

Indian police force movies

The unstoppable police officers of Rohit Shetty undertake a strange, if not completely unsteady, entry into the world of online series. The Indian police force targets the man known as “India’s top-wanted terrorist”—a young man who appears to be as simple-minded as he is cunning. The resulting suspense lacks authentic heat and dirt and is cliched. 

For the most part, Shetty’s fourth Cop World film, Sooryavanshi (2021), has been slightly modified and scaled lower in Amazon Original Drama Indian Police Force. When there’s one different thing, it’s that the attitude of the seven-part show isn’t as militant as it appears in the movie. To create chaos across India, it throws an adventurous Muslim policeman against a radicalised teenager. 

The show appears to have no intention of portraying the men and women. Who comprise the overburdened security machinery that fights every day of the year. Just to maintain the safety of India’s expansive national capital town in a gritty, detailed manner. It never really has a chance to rise above the ordinary because of the clunky and uninteresting way it plays forth. 

Indian Police Force, written and directed by Rohit Shetty from a plot and storyline by Sandeep Saket along with Anusha Nandkumar. It commits the grave mistake of aiming for banal thrills and surface-level gloss rather than intense, realistic realism. Though there are plenty of action scenes, shootouts, and pursuits in the show. It lacks a lot of the roaring and high-pitched ferocity that one would expect from the Cop World. 

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But it doesn’t always make authenticity better. The show isn’t the engaging Indian police force thriller it could have become because of its simplistic look. 

Given the old material they are stuck with, the primary supporting members. Sidharth Malhotra, Shilpa Shetty, and Vivek Oberoi—don’t bring anything new. They act as though they are invincible and full of bluster. Their rhetorical barrage is hollow, and their confidence is strained. The crew of the Indian police force does experience tragedy at a critical moment. Yet they continue regardless of the risks they are exposed to while performing their duties. 

Despite its efforts to maintain equilibrium, the Indian Police Force contributes little to basic knowledge. of how policing functions in a busy Indian metropolis that requires constant observation due to the numerous risks that threaten it. 

On the surface, the movie is a prolonged cut-and-paste operation consisting of tropes. That are mixed from the director’s popular big-screen cop procedurals. The narrative of men in standard who risk their lives to serve their country is pieced together in a colourless and sterile manner. 

The remark “not all Muslims are terrorists but all terrorists are Muslims”. Lets the listener know right away where this is all heading to conclude. It’s been exhausted by it. Consequently, the show doesn’t deliver value for the money. 

Indian Police Force possesses the appearance and experience of a big-screen creation that has inexplicably concluded up on an online platform. This is due to the film’s predominant use of drone/fly-cam pictures. That swoop across the city skyline, frequently taking in the visitors attractions of India’s capital and Goa. Intercut with street-level adventure comprising the police officials addressing dedicated personal and professional obstacles. 

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video credit –
Prime Video India
Aashi jain

Aashi jain

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