Inspector Avinash Episodes [top] Review
Let's be honest: The supporting cast (except Urvashi Rautela as a surprisingly effective officer) is wooden. The background score is overbearing — expect loud dhak-dhak during every chase. And the show romanticizes police brutality in ways that might make you uncomfortable (episode 3's interrogation scene is brutal).
★★★½ (3.5/5) — Watch it for Randeep Hooda’s eyes, stay for the nostalgic case-of-the-week rush. inspector avinash episodes
Watch Episode 7 closely: Avinash doesn't fire a single bullet. He simply talks a gang leader into surrendering by citing his mother's court case. That's not typical heroism — it's psychological warfare. Let's be honest: The supporting cast (except Urvashi
The show is structured around the infamous "Gang of Four" dacoits who terrorized Uttar Pradesh in the '90s. But instead of a single, stretched narrative, each episode (or two-episode arc) functions like a mini-movie. One episode tracks a jewelry heist. Another follows a fake currency racket. Another dives into a jailbreak. This old-school "case of the week" format feels refreshingly nostalgic in an era of slow-burn, 10-hour movies disguised as series. ★★★½ (3
Randeep Hooda plays the real-life IPS officer Avinash Mishra. Unlike the usual cop who screams and smashes heads, Hooda's Avinash is eerily calm, almost withdrawn. He speaks in a low, measured tone, even when staring down a dozen armed men. His signature move isn't a flying kick — it's waiting . He waits for the criminal to make a mistake, for the informer to call, for the trap to close. It's a quiet, coiled intensity that makes every episode feel tense, even when nothing is exploding.
What makes it interesting: . Episode 4, where he lets a small-time thief go to catch a bigger fish, is a masterclass in pragmatic policing — no gunfights, just patience and manipulation.