I went into watching Ikka with genuinely high hopes. Sunny Deol and Akshaye Khanna sharing screen space again, almost three decades after Border, felt like a big deal. Add a courtroom drama setup on Netflix, directed by Siddharth P Malhotra, and I was ready for a solid weekend watch.
By the time the end credits rolled, though, I found myself checking how much runtime was left more than once. Here’s my honest breakdown of why I wouldn’t recommend rushing and opening your Netflix account to watch this one.
1. It’s Nowhere Close to Damini
I couldn’t help but measure this film against Deol’s own Damini, since it’s clearly borrowing from that courtroom-drama playbook. The comparison doesn’t do Ikka any favours. Where Damini had writing that made every scene count, this one felt thin in comparison. It’s not even close, and that gap is obvious within the first hour.
2. Not a Single Courtroom Moment That Stays With You
Deol’s biggest strength has always been that one line delivered with full force, the kind that becomes a dialogue people quote for years. I kept waiting for that moment in Ikka, and it just never arrived. The courtroom scenes go through the motions without ever building real tension, and I walked away without a single monologue worth remembering.
3. Akshaye Khanna Feels Stuck in Repeat Mode
I’ll admit Khanna’s screen presence is still sharp. But watching him here, I couldn’t shake the feeling I’d seen this exact act before, in Dhurandhar. The same stare, the same clipped delivery, the same brooding energy, just placed in a different story. It works in isolated moments, but it stops feeling like a fresh character and starts feeling like a repeat performance.
4. Sunny Deol Without the Aggression Doesn’t Land
This one surprised me. Deol plays it restrained for most of the film, and on paper that sounds like a mature choice. In practice, it doesn’t quite work. So much of his appeal comes from that raw, loud intensity, and without it, he doesn’t feel like the larger-than-life lawyer the film wants him to be. I found myself missing the version of Deol who owns the room.
5. The Screenplay Just Doesn’t Hold Up
If I’m being fair, the climax genuinely works, and the cast is clearly giving it their all. But the film around them is the problem. The story meanders, the middle portion drags, and by the time it picks up again, a lot of the tension has already leaked out. Good performances can only carry a weak script so far, and here, they’re doing a lot of heavy lifting.
6. Predictable Pacing and a Weak Romantic Subplot
The film’s pacing reminded me more of a TV serial than a tightly edited feature. Scenes stretch longer than they need to, and the romantic subplot woven into the main story adds very little. If anything, it slows things down further. I’d have happily traded those detours for a sharper focus on the actual case.
7. Legal Twists Feel More Pulpy Than Credible
For a film built entirely around a court case, the legal logic didn’t convince me. The twists lean more toward dramatic novel territory than anything grounded in how a real trial unfolds. Paired with a background score that rarely lifts a scene and songs that feel tacked on, the film never quite builds the tension a legal thriller needs to work.
My Final Verdict
Ikka has the ingredients of a good film: a strong cast, a promising premise, and a climax that actually delivers. But the writing lets it all down. It’s watchable if you’re a big fan of Deol or Khanna and just want to see them share the screen again, but if you’re hoping for a gripping courtroom thriller, I’d say this one is safe to skip this weekend. Save it for a slow weekday instead, when your expectations are lower.
Ikka isn’t the courtroom thriller this weekend needed, but there are plenty of better options streaming right now. Check out our latest movie reviews to find something worth your time instead.

