Inspector Avinash Season 2 Review: ⭐⭐⭐☆☆ (3/5)
Inspector Avinash Season 2 is a good crime thriller that keeps stopping itself from becoming a great one. It has everything it needs: a genuinely compelling lead performance, a gritty atmosphere that never lets up, action sequences that are staged with real confidence, and a story that this time around tries to get personal in ways the first season didn’t.
What it doesn’t have is the willingness to surprise you. If you’ve watched enough Indian crime dramas — or enough crime dramas anywhere — you’ll see most of the significant moments coming well before they arrive. The show knows exactly what it is and who it’s for, and within those boundaries it delivers. The boundaries just aren’t particularly wide.
Streaming on: JioHotstar
Director: Neeraj Pathak
Cast: Randeep Hooda, Urvashi Rautela, Amit Sial, Abhimanyu Singh, Freddy Daruwala, Rajneesh Duggal
What the Season Is Actually About
Season 2 takes Avinash Mishra somewhere the first season only hinted at — into genuinely personal territory. The stakes this time aren’t just professional. His family is threatened. His identity is under pressure. The criminal networks he’s up against have a reach that extends directly into his private life in ways that make every confrontation feel like it has more than one dimension.
The 1990s Uttar Pradesh setting continues to do heavy lifting. The dusty landscapes, the political backroom dealings, the specific texture of gang violence in that era — it all feels considered rather than decorative. Director Neeraj Pathak clearly has a strong visual sense of this world, and the show looks better than its genre position would lead you to expect.
The narrative moves fast. Perhaps too fast in places — there are subplots and side villains that get introduced and resolved at a pace that doesn’t leave much room for them to breathe. The show is more interested in momentum than in depth, which is a legitimate creative choice but one that occasionally costs it emotional impact.

Randeep Hooda Is the Reason to Watch
This needs to be said clearly and without qualification: Randeep Hooda is extraordinary in this role, and his performance is the reason this series works as well as it does.
What he does with Avinash Mishra in Season 2 goes beyond the straightforward action-hero register of Season 1. He plays a man who is exhausted in a very specific way — not just physically, but morally and emotionally. Avinash has been fighting so long and so hard for results that keep being compromised by systems that don’t care about results, and Hooda lets that accumulation show.
The quieter scenes — family moments, moments of doubt before a confrontation, the specific kind of stillness that falls over a person who has made a decision they can’t take back — are where he’s best. They’re also the scenes where the gap between the performance and the writing is most visible, because Hooda is doing more with the material than the material asks for.
He described the season as emotionally demanding in press interviews, and you can see exactly why on screen. This isn’t a performance where an actor shows up for the action sequences and coasts through the rest. He’s present throughout, and the show genuinely needs him to be.
The Supporting Cast Does Its Job
Amit Sial is consistently one of the more reliable presences in Indian streaming crime drama, and he brings that reliability here. His character adds unpredictability to the criminal landscape around Avinash in ways that occasionally threaten to outpace the script’s management of him.
Abhimanyu Singh brings physical menace to a villain role that benefits from having a genuine sense of threat rather than performing danger. The character could have been more developed — this is one of the places where the show’s preference for pace over depth is most noticeable — but what’s on screen works for the purposes it serves.
The family scenes involving Avinash’s personal life are handled well enough, though some of the characters in that emotional orbit feel underdeveloped relative to their importance to the plot. The show tells you these relationships matter more than it shows you why they matter, which is a writing problem more than a casting one.
Action and Atmosphere
The action sequences in Season 2 are a clear step up from Season 1 in terms of scale and staging confidence. Gunfights and chase sequences are handled with a directness that suits the show’s tone — not stylized, not trying to be cinematic in the self-conscious way, just efficiently constructed and appropriately brutal.
The visual grammar of the series — the specific way it frames violence and its aftermath, the color palette that keeps everything feeling slightly oppressive — is one of its genuine strengths. It establishes that this is a world where things have weight, where actions have consequences, and where nobody comes out of anything clean. That atmosphere is consistent across the season in a way that props up the weaker narrative stretches.
The background score understands its job: build tension without announcing itself, amplify the moments that need amplification, and stay out of the way of the performances when the performances are doing enough.
The Problems That Hold It Back
The predictability is real and it’s the show’s most significant limitation. This is a crime thriller built from familiar components — the personal threat to the protagonist’s family, the corrupt politician pulling strings behind the gang war, the loyal colleague whose loyalty will be tested, and the villain who underestimates Avinash until it’s too late.
None of these elements is bad in itself. They’re crime drama conventions because they work. The issue is that Season 2 doesn’t find new angles on them or subvert them in ways that create genuine surprise. You’re watching a show execute a familiar playbook competently rather than watching a show take risks with what crime drama can do.
The middle episodes are where this is most noticeable. The pacing dips in places that feel like the show is marking time between set pieces rather than developing its story. Some scenes run longer than they need to without adding proportional value.
The screenplay occasionally loses track of how many subplots it’s managing and resolves some of them in ways that feel rushed relative to how prominently they were introduced. A tighter edit on a few episodes would have made the overall season feel more purposeful.
Also Read: Lukkhe Review: King Delivers a Confident Acting Debut in Prime Video Series
Who This Is For and Who It Isn’t
Inspector Avinash Season 2 is not a show for people who want their crime drama to subvert genre expectations, develop its entire ensemble with equal care, or end in ways that leave you genuinely uncertain about what you’ve just watched.
It is a show for people who want a gritty, fast-moving gangster saga set in a specific historical landscape, anchored by an actor who brings genuine craft to the role, with action sequences that earn their place in the story and an atmosphere that never lets up.
For that audience — and it’s a large one — this season delivers consistently. The entertainment value is real. The bingeability is real. Hooda’s performance alone is worth the time investment.
Also Read: Inspector Avinash Season 2 Release Date on JioHotstar
Flickonclick Verdict
Three stars out of five, and the honest breakdown of that rating is approximately four stars for Randeep Hooda’s performance and two and a half stars for the writing around it, averaged into something that reflects a show that works without quite reaching what it’s clearly capable of.
Season 1 set a standard that Season 2 meets but doesn’t meaningfully exceed. The ambition to go more personal, more emotionally complex, and more physically expansive is visible in the season’s DNA — the execution just doesn’t always match the ambition.
Watch it if you liked Season 1. Watch it if you like Randeep Hooda. Watch it if you want a crime drama that takes its atmosphere seriously and doesn’t apologize for being a mass-friendly thriller. Just don’t go in expecting to be surprised.
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐☆☆ (3/5)


