Plot: The most recent documentary to be added to Netflix’s library, Mumbai Mafia: Police Vs Underworld, is based on an actual Indian criminal story. The nation is aware of the D-company, an organised crime group that terrorised Mumbai in the 1990s. The tale of the growth and collapse of criminals and the underworld in Mumbai will be retold by Netflix from the viewpoints of police, journalists, and those formerly connected to D-Company.
Cast: Ravindra Angre, Puja Changoiwala, A.A. Khan, Shyam Kishore, Alex Perry, Feroz Sayed, Pradeep Sharma.
Director: Raaghav Dar and Francis Longhurst
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐½
Whats works
The authors go a step farther and consider the moral quandary that individual encounter experts experience. For instance, the officers discuss how they come to terms with killing people despite having spent their entire lives being taught to view it as a sin.
A. A. Khan, the police chief and creator of ATS, was the voice of conscience among the cops of that era, while Sharma and Angre speak with clear delight about their part in killing gangsters. Gangsters Maya Dolas and Dilip Buwa were killed in the gunfight that took place at Lokhandwala in 1991, and Khan was the one who organised it. Khan, who spoke with the documentary’s creators just before he passed away, recounts quitting the force because he was troubled by the overt encounters and the rivalry among officers to have the longest hit list. It was one of the highly impacted scene of the documentary.
The authors go a step further and focus on the moral quandary that encounter specialists personally experience. As an illustration, the officers discuss how they adjust to killing people despite having spent their entire lives being taught that it is wrong.
What not works
The documentary occasionally provides insufficient details, leaving the story with huge gaps. It appears that there are unfinished features spread across the environment.
While there are plenty journalists covering the events in the documentary, viewers are still left wanting an expert interpretation of the occurrences. The narrative is supported by a few ideas and opinions here and there, but it does not appear like enough.
Overall review
the documentary Mumbai Mafia: Police vs. The Underworld is essential viewing. Not your average cops against bad guy story. It discusses how the idea of terrible guys evolves over time. Attackers can occasionally turn into guardians. The horrific events and experiences that have occurred during the 1990s as a result of syndicates, gang wars, police against criminal shootouts, organised crime, terrorism, and more cannot be covered in eighty-seven minutes. However, it is a great effort to get viewers to reflect and do more study following the programme. In the documentary, you may relive 90’s Bombay