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After all the theatrics, Sunny Deol decides to not play to the gallery in Ikka, downplaying the emotional moments, moral dilemmas and courtroom sequences for the most part.

Sunny Deol and Akshaye Khanna’s Ikka is now streaming on Netflix.
IkkaU/A
2.5/5
Starring: Sunny Deol, Akshaye Khanna, Tillotama Shome and Dia MirzaDirector: Siddharth P MalhotraPlatform: Netflix
Ikka Movie Review: Siddharth P Malhotra’s Ikka is one of those films that’s all style and very little substance. It takes pride in being a slick legal suspense drama. It also strives for a cerebral edge. The narrative is packed with twists, turns and anti-climaxes but the problem is that most of them can be seen coming from a mile away. It’s ambitious but unfortunately crumbles under its own weight.
The film opens with a gruesome sequence. Shouryamann Gaur, the son of a rich industrialist and politician, meets a young Soma Mittal at a bar in South Mumbai. A few drinks down, they decide to spend the night together. But during their ride, Soma is violently attacked by Shouryamann. He eventually pushes her off the car on a deserted road to die alone.
The scene then cuts to ‘undefeated defense lawyer’ Arjun Mehra addressing a town hall where he poses a tough question: Is a truck driver and a car driver equal in the eyes of court and justice? But his talk gets interrupted with a frantic call from his wife Avantika, who informs him that their daughter Samaira has been admitted to a hospital.
It’s revealed that Samaira has been diagnosed with advanced-stage leukemia. When doctors inform the family that the only way to save her is through a stem cell transplant from a parent, we learn that Arjun isn’t her biological father. Meanwhile, on the professional front, Arjun is approached to fight Shouryamann’s case but refuses owing to deep-seated personal differences with him.
Soon, his personal and professional worlds become intertwined in a cruel twist of fate. The only way to save Samaira’s life now hinges on his ability to secure a victory for Shouryamann. Enter Madhura Banerjee, a public prosecutor who stands in his way. As Soma slips into a coma and Samaira fights for survival, the courtroom transforms into a labyrinth of moral dilemmas and high-stakes confrontations.
But not every peak point that appears compelling on paper translates effectively to the screen and Ikka falls squarely into that trap. Coherence is not its strongest suit. In a post-interval scene, Arjun tells Madhura, “Yours isn’t a watertight case.” Ironically, that line sums up the film’s biggest problem. There’s a lot happening at once but very little of it comes together in a convincing manner.
A middling screenplay, lazy writing, less-than-crisp editing and a lack of sustained tension prevent Ikka from realising what it had set out to achieve. The central moral dilemma – a man torn between his professional ethics and his desperate need to save his daughter – should have been the film’s emotional and dramatic backbone. Instead, it remains frustratingly underdeveloped.
Arjun’s inner conflict rarely lands with the weight it deserves, and as a result, the audience never truly invests in his predicament. And instead of adding emotional depth to the narrative, the exchanges between Arjun and Avantika as they grapple with their daughter’s condition often feel like interruptions rather than organic extensions of the story.
Their moments of heartbreak are meant to humanise the characters but they end up disrupting the film’s momentum. Coupled with a sluggish second half, Ikka stretches itself thin, building towards a payoff that never quite arrives. As for the performances, Arjun may not be Sunny Deol’s career best performance but it surely is a gush of fresh air.
After all the theatrics and histrionics, he chooses to not play to the gallery this time, mostly downplaying the emotional moments, moral dilemmas and courtroom sequences. Having said that, he’s sometimes seen breaking out of character, bringing his Tara Singh-esque high decible energy that suddenly leads him to bang on a table, almost startling you.
But don’t expect Arjun to be an extension of Govind Srivastav from Damini. Arjun is less aggressive and less impulsive. His mantra? Never character-assassinate a woman even if it may make you win a case. But this is a rather one-tone character – no arc, no edge, no nuance, no surprises. And the ace cards he’s supposed to throw feel more like a duece.
Tillotama Shome as Madhura is nothing that we haven’t seen her in. But she holds her own against Sunny. Dia Mirza unfortunately fails to rise above an undercooked character, rendering hardly anything substantial to the narrative. But Ikka does the biggest disservice to Akshaye Khanna, who plays Shouryamann. For an actor as effortless compelling as him, the film offers remarkably little.
He’s relegated to a corner of the courtroom with that one constant brooding expression, which hardly makes him a worthy opponent to Arjun. The makers saddle him with a handful of dry repartees, wasting both his screen presence and dramatic potential. His dialogues are clearly designed to land as mic-drop moments but they barely register, let alone elicit the reaction they seem to be aiming for.
A cardboard cut-out of a rich, spoilt and entitled brat, he never stands out. It truly takes a special kind of talent to under-utilise Akshaye. Vijay Vikram Singh, who plays the judge, in fact, becomes more memorable than him. Sanjeeda Sheikh, who essays Shouryamann’s wife Gauri, is also made to fizzle out despite starting off as promising. Akansha Ranjan Kapoor in a cameo doesn’t leave a mark.
In a nutshell, Ikka is a damp squib. Like a house of cards, it’s fragile at its core. The collapse is inevitable. Our advice? Skip this film, play teen patti or Uno instead.
About the Author

Titas Chowdhury is a Special Correspondent at News18 Showsha. She writes about cinema, music and gender in cinema. Interviewing actors and filmmakers, writing about latest trends in showbiz and bringi…Read More






















