#rangbaaz3 Review
In the landscape of Indian crime web series, the Rangbaaz franchise has carved a niche for itself by digging into the gritty, real-life crime stories of India's heartland. After chronicling the rise and fall of gangsters from Uttar Pradesh and Bihar in its first two seasons, the third installment, titled Rangbaaz: Darr Ki Rajneeti (The Politics of Fear), shifts its focus west to the political battleground of Rajasthan.
The Rise of a Gangster-Politician: Inside the World of Rangbaaz: Darr Ki Rajneeti #rangbaaz3
Rangbaaz 3: Darr Ki Rajneeti is more than a crime thriller. It is an informative case study of India’s "criminal-politician" nexus. It demonstrates that the most dangerous weapon in a gangster’s arsenal is not a gun, but a ballot box. For viewers interested in the dark intersection of power, politics, and crime, this series serves as both an engaging drama and a harsh mirror to reality. It reminds us that in the game of Darr Ki Rajneeti , the only permanent thing is the fear itself. In the landscape of Indian crime web series,
The story traces the chilling metamorphosis of Harun Shah Ali. He begins as a sharp, ambitious student leader with a desire to fight for the oppressed. However, the series pulls no punches in showing how a thirst for power and the brutal realities of caste politics corrupt that ambition. Harun quickly learns that in the badlands of Bihar and eastern Uttar Pradesh, votes are not won by ideas but by fear, muscle power, and criminal clout. It is an informative case study of India’s
Upon release, critics praised Vineet Kumar Singh’s intense performance, noting how he brings a quiet menace to the role. While some felt the pacing was slower than the previous Rangbaaz seasons, most agreed that Darr Ki Rajneeti offered a more cerebral and chilling take on the genre. It scored points for not flinching from the brutal reality of beheadings, police encounters, and electoral fraud.
Directed by Nikhil Nagesh Bhat ( Hurdang ), the series is shot with a documentary-style realism. The dusty bylanes of small-town Bihar, the cramped tea stalls where conspiracies are hatched, and the sprawling havelis of the powerful are all rendered in earthy, muted tones.
The series is anchored by a powerful cat-and-mouse dynamic between Harun and the law. The character of (played by Sohum Shah, known for Tumbbad ), a fictionalized version of the real-life officer who pursued Shukla, provides the moral counterweight. Rajesh Singh is an upright, no-nonsense cop who refuses to bow to political pressure. Their conflict drives the narrative—one a man who believes the end justifies the means, the other a man who believes the law is the only means.