Tag Archives: Ikka

Movie Review: Ikka (2026)

2.5 Stars (out of 4)

Watch Ikka on Netflix

The courtroom drama Ikka (“Ace“) is billed as a tense showdown between veteran actors Sunny Deol and Akshaye Khanna, and in that regard, it delivers. With a different directorial focus, Ikka could have been more than that. An intriguing premise goes unexplored in favor of an approach that is broad and shallow.

Deol plays undefeated celebrity defense attorney Arjun Mehra, nicknamed “Ikka” for his penchant for playing his key evidence in dramatic, last-minute fashion. He and his wife Avantika (Dia Mirza) share a 13-year-old daughter, Samaira (Daria Bedi). The girl is diagnosed with leukemia, which is treatable with a bone marrow transplant.

Meanwhile, Arjun is hired to defend Shourya (Khanna) — son of a wealthy politician — for the attempted murder of a young woman named Soma (Akansha Ranjan Kapoor), who is alive but unconscious. Arjun initially refuses, due to a long-standing conflict between the men, but he relents because he needs Shourya to donate his bone marrow to Samaira. Why? Shourya is Samaira’s biological father! He dumped Avantika when she refused to get an abortion, and Arjun married her instead, raising Samaira as his own.

The soapy setup is amplified by a heavy-handed Julius Packiam score that doesn’t trust the audience enough to draw its own emotional conclusions. Transitions between tense scenes and light-hearted ones are awkward as is, and the overwrought score makes them even more so.

Another way in which Ikka is heavy-handed (in a good way) is it’s pro-woman point of view. Arjun’s main moral conflict in his approach to how he litigates the case is whether or not to use Soma’s social media account — complete with photos of her drinking alcohol and posing for photos with men — against her. He doesn’t want to tarnish her image in order to win, even if his own daughter’s life is on the line. The movie spends a lot of time on this plot point, really emphasizing how repugnant victim-blaming is.

There are related themes that are brought up but aren’t explored as much as they could’ve been. Samaira is taunted by some classmates because her father is defending “that rapist.” It would have been great to have a scene where Samaira and her father talk about violence against women and legal rules versus moral ones — even better if Samaira copped a bit of age-appropriate attitude with her dad. Instead, the plot point is dropped after Samaira says that she defended her dad’s reputation offscreen.

Fans watching Ikka for tense scenes between Sunny Deol and Akshaye Khanna will not be disappointed. Deol pounds his fists on the table and shouts. There are multiple shots of Khanna scowling and walking in slow motion — a shot popularized in Dhurandhar that filmmakers will struggle to resist going forward.

Tillotama Shome plays the prosecutor opposing Arjun, Madhura Banerjee. Shome is as reliable a performer as there is, and she does a fine job here, even if she’s asked by director Siddharth P. Malhotra to make her expressions a bit more obvious to match the bold energy of the men.

Dia Mirza spends the film acting circles around everyone else in the cast. She plays her role straight and absolutely nails it, lending gravity to all her scenes. Had everyone in Ikka been encouraged to take the same approach to their performances, the film might have felt more substantial and less pandering.

Links

The Next on Netflix India 2026 Lineup

Netflix hosted their Next on Netflix India 2026 event to reveal the Original titles they plan to release this year. The lineup included eight brand new titles, with additional details about other previously announced movies and series. I wrote about all of the titles presented at the event for What’s on Netflix, incorporating the new information into our giant 2026 Netflix India preview. That’s a pretty objective piece, so I thought I’d write about some of the Netflix Original titles I’m most looking forward to in 2026, starting with the movies.

Accused
Konkona Sen Sharma and Pratibha Ranta play a couple whose marriage is strained by allegations of sexual misconduct. The fact that Netflix India is even putting out an LGBTQ relationship drama makes it worth watching.

Ikka
Sunny Deol makes his streaming debut opposite Akshaye Khanna in this courtroom drama.

Lust Stories 3
Check out the lineup of directors for this anthology series: Vikramaditya Motwane, Kiran Rao, Shakun Batra, and Vishal Bhardwaj. Absolutely insane. The cast is outrageous, too: Konkona Sen Sharma, Radhika Apte, Vijay Varma, Abhishek Banerjee, Gurfateh Pirzada, Sana Thampi, Ali Fazal, Radhika Madan, Aditi Rao Hydari, and Siddharth.

Maa Behen
Madhuri Dixit plays Triptii Dimri’s mom. ‘Nuff said.

Made in Korea
This Tamil-Korean cross-cultural coming-of-age story sounds fun.

Toaster
This is the movie I’m most excited about. Rajkummar Rao plays a guy whose new marriage — to Sanya Malhotra — implodes immediately, and he becomes obsessed with a fancy toaster they got as a wedding gift.

I was disappointed that Imran Khan’s comeback film Adhure Hum Adhure Tum wasn’t part of the Next on Netflix India 2026 presentation. Apparently, the executive who greenlit it isn’t with the company anymore, so the team is just waiting around to see if Netflix is still interested.

Now the series. Obviously, I don’t review many Indian series on this site, but a few of these Original shows look pretty good.

Family Business
Anil Kapoor plays a tycoon who hands the reigns of his company over to his successor (Vijay Varma), only to boot his protégé and retake the company. It sounds like a more contentious version of the Disney succession drama from a few years ago.

Musafir Cafe
I love that they’re offering something besides thrillers and crime shows. Netflix needs more romantic dramas.

Super Subbu
They also need more comedies. This Telugu show about an unqualified sex ed teacher sounds funny.

Talaash: A Mother’s Search
I will watch anything set in Shimla.

Several of the newly announced shows feel like Netflix is cutting corners (something we know they’ve been doing, like cancelling the second season of Kaala Paani and postponing Black Warrant Season 2 because of budget issues). For example, Netflix bought the rights to make a second season of the YouTube series Dhindora. They’ve got a reality show about rich Indians in Dubai called Desi Bling. They have a fiction show based on the online learning platform Physics Wallah. These seem relatively low-effort to develop and probably cost next to nothing.

Then there’s the reality show Lock Upp from producer Ekta Kapoor. She had another show named Lock Upp that aired on her streaming service ALTBalaji in 2022, hosted by Kangana Ranaut. It’s unclear from the materials Netflix released if this is a reboot of the existing format, or if they are just re-airing the original 2022 season. The latter would be hilarious.

All in all, we’ve got four returning Original Indian series, 13 new Original series, and 11 Original movies confirmed for the rest of the year. That’s a lot, especially since only Season 2 of Kohrra and the new series Hello Bachhon (they Physics Wallah show) have release dates (February 11 and March 6, respectively). I guess we’ll have to wait and see what we get in 2026.