Betaal | |
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Created by | Patrick Graham |
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Country of origin | India |
Original language | Hindi |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 4 |
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Camera setup | Single-camera |
Running time | 45-49 Minutes |
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Network | Netflix |
Release | 24 May 2020 (2020-5-24) |
Betaal, Betāl or Betāla (transl. "Demon") is an Indianzombiehorror television series based in a remote village that serves as the battleground betweenEast India Company Army officer Lt. Col John Lynedoch, his battalion of zombieredcoats from theIndian Rebellion of 1857, and the fictional CIPD force.[1] The series is written and directed by Patrick Graham and co-directed by National Award winner, Nikhil Mahajan.[2] Produced byBlumhouse Productions andRed Chillies Entertainment, the series starsVineet Kumar Singh andAahana Kumra in significant roles.[3][4] The series received generally negative reviews, with praise for its performances and the use ofmythology andzombie, but criticism for its lack of thrill and editing.
Commandant Vikram Sirohi leads the Baaz Squad, an elite unit tasked with clearing land for development projects in remote Indian regions. Complicit with corrupt tycoon Ajay Mudhalvan, Vikram follows orders to forcibly relocate villagers, unaware of the dark secrets lurking beneath the surface. When a tunnel clearing operation unleashes an undead army led by a British colonel bent on domination, Vikram and survivors must confront their past sins and battle for survival against the supernatural onslaught.
As chaos ensues, Vikram and his team uncover the sinister origins of the undead horde and the colonel's quest for power. Trapped in a remote barracks, they face internal strife as Tyagi falls under the colonel's control and Mudhalvan betrays them for his own survival. Vikram, haunted by past atrocities, finds redemption in protecting Saanvi, Mudhalvan's daughter, who holds a crucial key to stopping the colonel's rampage. Amidst the onslaught, sacrifices are made, and Vikram's ultimate act of selflessness triggers a cataclysmic showdown, leading to the destruction of the colonel's shrine and the release of Saanvi.
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date |
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1 | "The Tunnel" |
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| 24 May 2020 (2020-5-24) |
2 | "The Barracks" |
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| 24 May 2020 (2020-5-24) |
3 | "The Battle" |
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| 24 May 2020 (2020-5-24) |
4 | "The Colonel" |
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| 24 May 2020 (2020-5-24) |
On 15 June 2019, it was announced thatNetflix had given the production a series order.[5] The series is written and directed by Patrick Graham, co-written by Suhani Kanwar and co-directed by Nikhil Mahajan and Casting by Paragg Mehta. The show was produced byRed Chillies Entertainment. The shooting was wrapped up in August 2019.[6][7] It was released onNetflix, making it the second collaboration between the production house and Netflix.[8]
The trailer was released byNetflix India on 8 May 2020.[9] The series started streaming on Netflix from 24 May 2020.[10]
Rahul Desai fromFilm Companion said that, "Betaal, for much of its four episodes, is a brilliant homegrown spoof on the zombie-folk horror genre. The zombies are utterly useless, spending their time knocking on closed doors and being butter-fingered flesh eaters."[11] Poulomi Das onSilver Screen India provide another scathingly negative review for the show's opening season saying, "...the zombie thriller – another Netflix misfire in a series of misfires – somehow manages to be too long, repetitive and needlessly convoluted, stretching its one-line plot, glaringly under-written, way too thin."[12] In contrast to these negative reviews, postcolonial scholarJohan Höglund's academic study of the series notes its political content and argues that the "zombie pandemic that erupts in Betaal is an attempt to render the apocalyptic violence and death that unregulated capitalism performs on ecology and precarious communities"[13]