Ab Hoga Hisaab Season 2 Review-cricketmovie.com

Ab Hoga Hisaab Season 2 Review: Falls Short of the High Standards Set by first season
Ab Hoga Hisaab Season 2 Web Series Rating: 2 Stars

Watched Ab Hoga Hisaab Season 2 web series on Amazon MX Player. So, let’s analyze the cast, release date, story, positive/negatives and at last my personal view on this web series.

Cast: Sanjay Kapoor, Shaheer Sheikh, Mouni Roy, Avinash Mishra, Nimrit Kaur Ahluwalia, Harman Singha and Aasheema Vardaan
Director: Divyanshu Malhotra
Release Date: 3rd July 2026 on Amazon MX Player
Duration: 10 Episodes/ 35 Minutes

Story: In the 1st season brothers you have seen Bobby Manocha (Shaheer Sheikh) returns to Punjab hiding the truth from his family that he is deported after attempting to enter through an illegal “dunki or donkey” route. He is determined to help his younger brother Bunty (Avinash Mishra) migrate through legitimate channels. Desperate to secure a future for his younger brother Bunty, he gets entangled with Goldy Sekhon’s (Sanjay Kapoor) brutal organ trafficking network. However, when Bunty mysteriously disappears, Bobby’s search for answers exposes a larger human trafficking racket operating behind the façade of a Canada immigration consultancy.

Three months after the previous season, Bobby resumes his dangerous hunt for his missing brother Bunty leading to a showdown with Goldy and his enforcer Kamna (Mouni Roy). What begins as a desperate search quickly unravels a sinister human-trafficking syndicate disguised as a Canada immigration network.

With Inspector Dosanjh (Harman Singha) and Bunty’s wife Ghazal (Nimrit Kaur Ahluwalia) by his side, Bobby must confront corruption, betrayal, and his own fears to become an unlikely hero. Will he able to find his brother and how he exposes the human trafficking racket of Goldy Sekhon is all about this season.

Positives
1. Performances
2. Cinematography
3. Initial episodes
4. Screenplay

Negatives
1. Length
2. Unnecessary subplots
3. Story
4. Climax
5. Direction

Durgesh Tiwary’s View: When I watched the trailer planned to watch this series on its premiere day as loved the trailer and liked the 1st part of this season. Three months after the previous season, Bobby Manocha resumes his dangerous hunt for his missing brother, Bunty. As deadly enemies close in, his relentless quest for revenge forces him to confront shocking truths that could change everything he believes about his family’s fate.

Ab Hoga Hisaab Season 2 arrives with higher expectations as the first season did just enough to keep viewers invested, ending with the promise of a darker, more layered psychological battle. Unfortunately, instead of expanding its world, it rushes through it, delivering a sequel that feels more hurried than thrilling. On paper, the premise has all the ingredients of an engaging psychological thriller. In execution, however, the series rarely capitalizes on its strongest ideas. The cinematography creates an effective atmosphere of tension, while the production design and background score add to the show’s slick presentation. However, visual finesse cannot compensate for storytelling that struggles to maintain coherence. A thriller can survive modest production values, but it cannot survive weak writing. The disappointment is amplified because the franchise still has genuine potential. Themes of ambition, corruption, financial aspirations and moral compromise remain compelling, and the first season hinted at a much richer world. This follow-up, however, barely scratches the surface, rushing through ideas that deserved far more attention. Season two had every opportunity to deepen those ideas. Instead, it rushes through them without allowing any meaningful emotional or psychological exploration. This is not a case of a bad premise. It is a case of a promising premise being let down by weak writing, inconsistent direction, hurried production, and underwhelming execution.

The performances remain one of the strongest aspects of the show. Shaheer Sheikh once again delivers a committed performance, bringing sincerity and emotional conviction to Bobby even when the writing repeatedly changes his character’s direction. Nimrit Kaur Ahluwalia lends warmth and honesty to her role despite being given limited scope. Sanjay Kapoor and Mouni Roy continue to be effective in morally grey roles, but the screenplay never allows either character to evolve beyond functional plot devices. Much of the supporting cast is similarly underserved. Harman Singha is convincing as the determined inspector, while Aasheema Vardaan emerges as a pleasant surprise. The rest of the supporting cast, however, remains largely underutilized.

On the flipside, the biggest problem lies in the writing. The screenplay constantly introduces new twists, conflicts and revelations, but few of them are properly developed. Shocking moments arrive before the narrative has earned them, making them feel manufactured rather than surprising. Characters make emotional decisions that contradict their earlier motivations, while confrontations that should have carried dramatic weight are resolved too quickly to leave any impact. The result is a thriller that remains busy but rarely becomes gripping. The inconsistent editing only adds to the problem. Character arcs feel incomplete, relationships change overnight and loyalties shift with little explanation. Supporting characters disappear for episodes and conveniently return whenever the plot requires them. Instead of creating urgency, the choppy narrative creates confusion, making it increasingly difficult to stay emotionally invested. Several key moments are cut short before they have the chance to resonate. The final episodes underline everything that has been missing throughout the season. The climax offers neither emotional closure nor narrative satisfaction. Key revelations fail to land because the groundwork has never been properly laid, while several character decisions feel irrational. The finale stretches to accommodate another season, but instead of creating anticipation, it leaves behind frustration.

Overall, series is a reminder that compelling ideas alone cannot sustain a series. It is not let down by its premise but by its execution. Despite sincere performances particularly from Shaheer Sheikh series collapses under weak writing, inconsistent pacing and an underwhelming climax. It feels less like a confident second chapter and more like a first draft that reached the screen before it was ready. It is a disappointing continuation of a story that deserved far more care than it ultimately received. My view on this web-series Not Recommended.

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