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Kerala Crime Files | List Of Latest Web Series 2023

Kerala Crime Files 2023


Kerala Crime Files | List Of Latest Web Series 2023


Release Date in India

23-Jun-23

Language

Telegu

Genre

Crime, Thriller

Director

Khabeer Ahammed 

Writer

Ashiq Aimar

Original Language

Malayalam

Producer

Pranav pillai, Rahul Nair

Music

Hesham Abdul wahab, 

Production

Frist print studio

Duration

30min Episode

Cast

Lal, Navas Vallikkunnu, Aju Vaeghese, Sanju Sanichen, zhinz Shan

 

 

About Kerala Crime Files 2023

The police are puzzled by mysterious death f a prostitute in a suburban hotel room because the only address they have wrong.



Kerala Crime Files 2023 all Episode  


Kerala Crime Files 2023 Episode 01(Crime Scene), Episode 02(Mahazar) and Episode 03(Detection)






Kerala Crime Files 2023 Episode 04(Finding), Episode 05(Evience)  and Episode 06(Charge sheet)




Movies and web-series Review


Kerala Crime Files first Disney+ Hotstar Malayalam web series one line description is amazing. A murder takes place at the hotel, and the police only have a fake address. But apart from the cinematography which uses colors and lenses to create visual effect, the overall packaging of this web series on June and Madhuram fame Ahammed Kabir was very flat and unexciting. With each episode running under 30 minutes, the experience is never tiring.
The decision to cast Aju Varghese as a newly married rookie cop with a bit of naïveté seems right. But as the series progresses, the complexity increases and SI Manoj has to show some evolutions. Aju Varghese's reaction when the police raided a house in Trivandrum looked artificially cool, and I wanted to ask almost any policeman if that's how they act. As CI Kurian, Lal felt like an insignificant addition to the story, as his character was only there to provide approval and, of course, a lack of family life for the police. Zhinz Shan and Navas Vallikkunnu were good in their roles as police officers. Sanju Sanichen's performance was over-enthusiastic even at the writing level. The female characters were important to the story, but the scope of the performance was very small.
A murder takes place at the hotel, and the police only have a fake address. But apart from the cinematography which uses colors and lenses to create visual effect, the overall packaging of this web series on June and Madhuram fame Ahammed Kabir was very flat and unexciting. With each episode running under 30 minutes, the experience is never tiring.

A murder of a sex worker takes place at Kochi's Grand Tourist House lodge. SI Manoj and his team are investigating under CI Kurian. The man who accompanied the woman was the suspect, Shiju. But during the investigation, the police found that the address given by him was fake. With no information to help them identify Shiju, the police are at a distraught location. We see how he was found by investigating all possibilities and coincidences in Kerala Crime Files - Shiju, Parayil Veedu, Neendakara.

As I said earlier, each episode in this series is less than 30 minutes long. And there are only 6 episodes. But the development of the work is more convenient than complicated. The main problem with writing the series was how it tried to deal with the police. When the subplots complement the central story of the series, it adds depth to the whole thing. There is a scene in the serial where newly married SI Manoj meets his father-in-law at a Coffee House. Even though it's a casual scene about a police officer talking about his personal life, they've given a purpose to this deviation. But other turns of the case to show the family life of the police officers do not fit well with the investigation story.

Ahammed Kabir and his frequent collaborator Jitin Stanislaus have given the series a visual aesthetic that really tries to elevate the drama that Aashiq Aimar's writing lacks. The OTT-friendly aspect ratio and depth-inducing lenses greatly aid the series' appeal. I also felt that the characterization of the antagonist was too thin. Through multiple anecdotes about the individual, they created the image of an impulsive, remorseful man with an innate criminal mentality. But in the end, as we see, a person who does not match the image given to him in the series. At times, the placement of the loud background score felt completely uncalled for, as it tried to heighten the drama in what were mostly bland reaction shots.

After watching the series, I felt that it would have been more compelling if it had been conceived as a 2-hour movie that focused solely on the story. Kerala Crime Files is a stretched, flat thriller that tries to redeem itself through its visuals.

A murder of a sex worker takes place at Kochi's Grand Tourist House lodge. SI Manoj and his team are investigating under CI Kurian. The man who accompanied the woman was the suspect, Shiju. But during the investigation, the police found that the address given by him was fake. With no information to help them identify Shiju, the police are at a distraught location. We see how he was found by investigating all possibilities and coincidences in Kerala Crime Files - Shiju, Parayil Veedu, Neendakara.

As I said earlier, each episode in this series is less than 30 minutes long. And there are only 6 episodes. But the development of the work is more convenient than complicated. The main problem with writing the series was how it tried to deal with the police. When the subplots complement the central story of the series, it adds depth to the whole thing. There is a scene in the serial where newly married SI Manoj meets his father-in-law at a Coffee House. Even though it's a casual scene about a police officer talking about his personal life, they've given a purpose to this deviation. But other turns of the case to show the family life of the police officers do not fit well with the investigation story.

Ahammed Kabir and his frequent collaborator Jitin Stanislaus have given the series a visual aesthetic that really tries to elevate the drama that Aashiq Aimar's writing lacks. The OTT-friendly aspect ratio and depth-inducing lenses greatly aid the series' appeal. I also felt that the characterization of the antagonist was too thin. Through multiple anecdotes about the individual, they created the image of an impulsive, remorseful man with an innate criminal mentality. But in the end, as we see, a person who does not match the image given to him in the series. At times, the placement of the loud background score felt completely uncalled for, as it tried to heighten the drama in what were mostly bland reaction shots.

The decision to cast Aju Varghese as a newly married rookie cop with a bit of naïveté seems right. But as the series progresses, the complexity increases and SI Manoj has to show some evolutions. Aju Varghese's reaction when the police raided a house in Trivandrum looked artificially cool, and I wanted to ask almost any policeman if that's how they act. As CI Kurian, Lal felt like an insignificant addition to the story, as his character was only there to provide approval and, of course, a lack of family life for the police. Zhinz Shan and Navas Vallikkunnu were good in their roles as police officers. Sanju Sanichen's performance was over-enthusiastic even at the writing level. The female characters were important to the story, but the scope of the performance was very small.

After watching the series, I felt that it would have been more compelling if it had been conceived as a 2-hour movie that focused solely on the story. Kerala Crime Files is a stretched, flat thriller that tries to redeem itself through its visuals.







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