Shodha is a six-episode Kannada thriller miniseries streaming on ZEE5, with each episode running for approximately 20 minutes. Helmed by director Sunil Mysuru, it is an adaptation of the Hindi web series Khoj – Parchaiyo Ke Uss Paar, though it incorporates minor narrative tweaks by writer Suhas Navarathna and creative inputs from actor-filmmaker Pawan Kumar. But does the involvement of the acclaimed director behind Lucia and U-Turn elevate this mystery?
Story
The story follows Rohit (Pawan Kumar), a successful lawyer who returns to his hometown, Madikeri, only to discover that his wife, Meera, has vanished. He lodges a police complaint with Inspector Bhairava (Arun Sagar) and reunites with his sister-in-law, Aditi (Anusha Ranganath), as well as his young daughter, Tara, who lives in a boarding school. However, tragedy strikes when Rohit meets with a horrific accident.
At the hospital, Rohit wakes up to find Bhairava, Aditi, and a mysterious woman by his bedside. When he questions her identity, she introduces herself as Meera (Siri Ravikumar)—sending him into utter disbelief, as he adamantly denies recognizing her. So, who is this woman? Has Rohit lost his memory? Why does he recall everyone except his own wife? And is there a deeper conspiracy at play? Unfortunately, the series only scratches the surface of these compelling questions.
Performances
Pawan Kumar delivers his most committed performance yet—though that isn’t saying much, given his past acting roles. His efforts are visible, yet neither the direction nor the execution lend depth to his character. Even skilled actors like Siri Ravikumar and Arun Sagar are underutilized, while Anusha Ranganath’s bland performance fails to evoke any emotional response.
Behind the scenes
Cinematographer Rahul Roy captures the scenic beauty of Madikeri with finesse, but the same precision doesn’t translate into emotional depth. Arjun Ramu’s music serves its purpose fleetingly but lacks lasting impact. The real letdown, however, is the editing—Anil Anirudh misses the chance to sharpen the pacing or enhance suspense with tighter cuts and more gripping cliffhangers. Was there any attempt to refine this in post-production? It doesn’t seem so.
Final Verdict
Shodha touches on themes like depression, trust, familial love, and psychological complexity, presenting a few genuinely gripping moments early on. Yet, it ultimately falters due to a half-baked screenplay—a clumsy fusion of dated Kannada soap opera tropes and half-hearted modern thriller elements. What might have sounded intriguing on paper falls flat in execution, marred by shallow writing, uninspired direction, and a painfully predictable twist.
Attempts to weave cultural references into the narrative add little substance, coming off as superficial rather than meaningful. While films like Kantara brilliantly integrate cultural motifs into storytelling, Shodha merely uses them as decorative flourishes without depth.
In the end, Shodha feels like a lazy rehash of an already mediocre thriller, sprinkled with regional touches that do little to salvage its flaws. Watching this miniseries is about as fulfilling as mindlessly scrolling through Instagram reels—a total waste of time. It’s proof that no amount of cultural gloss can disguise weak storytelling.