
The prime cast of Mandala Murders
Mandala Murders directed by Gopi Putharan and Manan Rawat has an ambitious scale with strong women characters and effective world building, but after an engaging start the series fizzles out at the finishing line. In spite of the somewhat limp ending the series deserves a watch for its portrayal of feminist rage specifically through the roles of Vaani Kapoor and Surveen Chawla. The latter absolutely chews the scenery with her portrayal of a shrewd woman.
Starcast: Vaani Kapoor, Surveen Chawla, Shriya Pilgaonkar, Vaibhav Raj Gupta, Jammel Khan and others
Genre: Thriller/crime
Creator: Gopi Puthran
Writers: Chirag Garg, Gopi Puthran, Avinash Dwivedi etc
Directors: Gopi Puthran and Manan Rawat
Based on: The Butcher of Benaraz novel
Cinematography: Shaz Mohammed
Music: Sanchit Balhara and Ankit Balhara
Executive Producers: Aditya Chopra, Akshaye Widhani etc
Production Company: YRF Entertainment
No of episodes: 8
Streaming site: Netflix
Mandala Murders streaming on Netflix has a Mardaani spillover in terms of the world inhabited by the women characters. For example, Vaani Kapoor’s Rea is often snubbed by her male colleagues on the account of gender, at one point a junior officer is surprised that a female officer has come to investigative a series of murders. Similarly, Surveen Chawla’s Ananya has to deal with a disloyal husband conspiring against her, this makes her calculative and a tough soul with gray areas.
Lastly there is Shriya Pilgaonkar’s Rukmini. Rukmini is a hugely ambitious leader of a secret society; through her character the two directors highlight female agency in a mystical context. To this Gopi Puthran and Manan Rawat add a whole lot of things with hits and misses in equal measure.

Without giving much away Mandala Murders is set in the town of Charandsapur. A series of brutal murders have shaken up the community. Vaani Kapoor is CBI Agent Rea Thomas. Rea carries a certain emotional baggage related to a girl whom she couldn’t save. Vaibhav Raj Gupta is a suspended cop Vikram Singh; he comes with his own motives. The two team up to uncover certain dark truths. As they dig deeper many secrets tumble out about an ancient society wiped away by the locals. This is the story in brief.
A strong aspect of Mandala Murders is the wonderful cinematography complementing the eerie atmospherics. Shaz Mohammad’s work is of a very high order. The timeline moves between 1950 and 2025; however, the switching of timelines never comes across as jarring thanks to his work. The locations of mysterious tunnels and the hazy forests come across as a character in themselves heightening the investigative portions. Ankit Balhara and Sachet Balhara’s score also jells perfectly with the show’s atmospherics.
The dynamics between Rea and Vikram Singh has also been depicted well by the two directors and the numerous writers. The emotional portions involving Vaibhav Raj Gupta specifically in the scenes of grief and anger has been both wonderfully written and enacted.
The layered characterization of the female characters is also plus particularly Surveen Chawla whose role shifts like a chameleon changing colors. She isn’t always likeable with her actions specifically in a crucial reveal of the last episode, at the same time viewers understand from where the tough personality comes. Surveen absolutely aces the part playing the different shades of Ananya Bhardwaj with ease.

Vaani Kapoor in her OTT debut is also good. She is successful in bringing both the no nonsense persona along with the required vulnerability. Shriya Pilgaonkar has a prominent part in the last episodes, and she too registers a strong impact with a fiery persona.

Jammel Khan as a man obsessed with ancient symbols is endearing as well. He brings in the required lightness to the proceedings. The rest of the cast including Manu Rishi Chadda and Raghubhir Yadav are also fine in their respective parts.
A major problem with Mandala Murders is the final episodes solving the mystery. The character of Aditi Pohankar as Moksha sticks out like a sore thumb. This is due to the stale writing with repetitive shots belonging to a different universe rather than this web series. The connection of Surveen Chawla’s role to the central mystery though a surprise feels jarring as well. The integration needed some foreshadowing rather than just a random surprise for shock value.
The multiple arcs with the numerous subplots also don’t always land, some are more effective than the others. The series could have cut down on some exposition to make the proceedings crisper.
Final word: Mandala Murders is worth watching for fans of thrillers stepped in folklore coupled with the strong women characters.


