Rangbaaz
Rangbaaz is more than an entertaining web series; it is a mirror held up to a complex socio-political reality. It deconstructs the myth that crime is simply a matter of individual choice, instead presenting it as a logical, albeit tragic, response to a system rigged against the powerless. Through the tragic arc of Haroon Shah Ali Baig, the series poses uncomfortable questions: In a democracy where the law is for sale, who is the real Rangbaaz —the man with the gun, or the man with the political ticket? By refusing to provide easy answers and opting for gritty realism over Bollywood-style heroism, Rangbaaz stands as a landmark in Indian digital storytelling, offering a chilling and essential commentary on the price of ambition in the badlands of India.
What elevates Rangbaaz above typical crime fare is its commitment to psychological depth. Haroon Shah Ali Baig is not a one-dimensional villain; he is a reluctant criminal whose circumstances harden him. The audience watches his moral disintegration in real time—from a boy who cries after his first kill to a man who orders massacres without blinking. Saqib Saleem delivers a career-defining performance, shedding his boyish charm for a cold, calculated intensity. Equally compelling is the antagonist, SP Shaukat Khan (played by Ahmareen Anjum, and later Ranvir Shorey in subsequent seasons), who provides a formidable counterbalance. The female characters, particularly Pratibha (Sana’s wife, played by Patralekhaa), are not mere props; they are active agents who navigate the dangerous waters of their husband’s criminal life, highlighting the gendered experience of power. Rangbaaz
The central theme of Rangbaaz is the deep entanglement of crime and governance. The series popularized and dissected the concept of the Bahubali —a local strongman who uses muscle power to win elections and exert control over a constituency. Unlike Western gangster narratives that often romanticize the mafia as a parallel empire, Rangbaaz shows that in rural India, crime is not parallel but perpendicular to the state; it intersects with it. Politicians require gangsters to rig votes, intimidate opponents, and control vote banks, while gangsters require political patronage for protection from the law. The character of DIG Rajesh Tiwari (played by Tigmanshu Dhulia) perfectly embodies this moral ambiguity, as he oscillates between upholding the law and using Sana for his own political gains. The series argues that crime flourishes not because of a few bad individuals, but because of a broken ecosystem that rewards ruthlessness. Rangbaaz is more than an entertaining web series;