Review: ‘HIT: The Third Case,’ starring Nani, Srinidhi Shetty, Ravindra Vijay and Prateik Babbar

May 2, 2025

by Carla Hay

Nani in “HIT: The Third Case” (Photo courtesy of Wall Poster Cinema)

“HIT: The Third Case”

Directed by Sailesh Kolanu

Telugu with subtitles

Culture Representation: Taking place in India, the action film “HIT: The Third Case” (the third movie in the “HIT” series) features an all-Indian cast of characters representing the working-class and middle-class.

Culture Clash: A vigilante police detective discovers a cult of serial killers, goes undercover to infiltrate the group, and becomes a murderer on a killing spree. 

Culture Audience: “HIT: The Third Case” will appeal primarily to people who are fans of the movie’s headliners and the “HIT” series, but this movie abandons the intriguing detective drama concept and makes it an unimaginative and gory massacre movie.

Nani and Srinidhi Shetty in “HIT: The Third Case” (Photo courtesy of Wall Poster Cinema)

“HIT: The Third Case” ruins this movie franchise’s original intent of being a compelling story series about police solving murder mysteries. Instead, this “HIT” movie is a bloated action schlockfest of excessive violence that glorifies police brutality. It just another trashy movie that panders to the lowest common demoninator by copying too many other action movie abominations that have terrible screenplays and exploitative violence and are churned out on a regular basis.

The “HIT” series began with 2020’s “HIT: The First Case” (which had a 2022 Hindi-langauge remake also titled “HIT: The First Case”) and continued with 2023’s “HIT: The 2nd Case.” Each movie features a different police detective as the movie’s protagonist. All the “HIT” movies so far have been written and directed by Sailesh Kolanu, which is why it’s so disappointing that “HIT: The Third Case” (the third move in the series) has taken such a tacky and lazy turn for the worse. The only apparent explanation is that Kolanu and the movie’s other filmmakers thought they would make more money with a mindless and gruesomely violent action flick instead of a thought-provoking and intelligent police detective drama.

In “HIT: The Third Case,” Arjun Sarkaar (played by Nani) is a superintendent of police for the Indian Police Service’s Homicide Intervention Team (HIT) in Visakhapatnam, India. Arjun is an angry and corrupt official who frequently commits police brutality. As shown in the movie, he doesn’t hesitate to break bones and beat up people whom he interrogates in custody or whom he catches in the act of committing crimes. He sometimes does this illegal police brutality in front of his colleagues, who do little or nothing to stop him.

Arjun is in therapy for his anger management problems, and he has trouble sleeping. But this therapy is clearly not working. When Arjun is shown in a therapy session, all he seems to care about is getting a higher dosage for his prescription medication. “HIT: The Third Case” is such a shallow film, there is no explanation for why Arjun is the way that he is, but his aggressive style of policing has apparently gotten a lot of people arrested.

“HIT: The Third Case” tries to have some comedy relief early on in the movie, when Arjun’s unnamed widower father (played by Samuthirakani) plays matchmaker for bachelor Arjun by signing up Arjun on a dating app without Arjun’s consent. It leads to a montage of Arjun going on numerous disasatrous dates that always end abruptly because Arjun scares or turns off the women by interrogating them like a harsh police officer. The women on these dates make excuses to use the restroom and they never come back.

Arjun is extremely judgmental, emotionally immature, and socially backwards in his thinking. However, Arjun seems to get lucky when he meets Mridula (played by Srinidhi Shetty) through the dating app where Arjun’s father created a profile for Arjun. When Arju and Mridula go on their first date, she says she admires his blunt honesty. They begin dating and fall in love with each other. Mridula has a secret that is revealed later in the movie.

Arjun is investigating a series of murders where corpses are found hanging upside down from trees in isolated wooded areas. The dead people’s throats have been slashed. It’s eventually discovered that the murderers are members of a serial killer cult named CTK (an acronym for Capture Torture Kiil), which is operating on the Dark Web. In order to join the CTK cult, prospective members have to kill at least two people in this way and video record these murders.

Arjun infiltrates the CTK cult by going undercover as a prospective member. His murder victims are criminals, whom he thinks all deserve to be killed. A huge plot hole in the movie is that Arjun is supposed to be a famous police detective (famous enough for strangers to know who he is when he’s out in public), and yet CTK’s leaders—two sadists named Samuel Joseph (played by Ravindra Vijay) and Alpha (played by Prateik Babbar)—don’t even recognize Arjun when he joins the cult. Arjun makes no effort to disguise himself.

Supporting characters in “HIT: The Third Case” are one-dimensional and have very hollow personalities. Three of these generic characters are Arjun’s HIT colleagues: director of general police Nageswara Rao (played by Rao Ramesh); assistant superintendant of police Varsh (played by Komalee Prasad); and sub-inspector Diwakar (played by Chaithu Jonnalagadda), who don’t do much in the story except enable and cater to Arjun’s nasty temper and out-of-control antics. None of the acting is impressive in this junkpile movie.

“HIT: The Third Case” (which has an overly long running time of 157 minutes) just becomes a mind-numbing, obnoxiously loud and terrible mess of heinous violence where the “hero” is no better than the villains. In fact, the “hero” murders and attacks more people than any other murderer and attacker in the movie. The action scenes also look ridiculous. Don’t expect a real detective mystery in “HIT: The Third Case.” This horrible movie is just an excuse to show vile and disgusting assaults and murders, with a meaningless story and a very warped portrayal of law enforcement and justice.

Wall Poster Cinema released “HIT: The Third Case” in select U.S. cinemas and in India on May 1, 2025.

Review: ‘HIT: The 2nd Case,’ starring Adivi Sesh and Meenakshi Chaudhary

December 17, 2022

by Carla Hay

Adivi Sesh in “HIT: The 2nd Case” (Photo courtesy of Wall Poster Cinema)

“HIT: The 2nd Case”

Directed by Sailesh Kolanu

Telugu with subtitles

Culture Representation: Taking place in Visakhapatnam, India, the action film “HIT: The 2nd Case” features an all-Indian cast of characters representing the working-class and middle-class.

Culture Clash: A self-assured police detective goes on the hunt for a serial killer, who murders women and who leaves their body parts at the crime scenes were his other murder victims are found. 

Culture Audience: “HIT: The 2nd Case” will appeal primarily to people who are fans of “HIT: The First Case” and suspenseful movies about police investigations of serial killings.

Adivi Sesh and Meenakshi Chaudhary in “HIT: The 2nd Case” (Photo courtesy of Wall Poster Cinema)

“HIT: The 2nd Case” is a captivating thriller from beginning to end. It’s a winning example of a sequel that’s better than the original movie. The story’s mystery is wider in scope and told in a more compelling way than in “HIT: The First Case,” a movie originally released in 2020 as a Telugu-language film, and then remade as a Hindi-language film released in 2022. It’s also a great idea to make each “HIT” movie with a different detective protagonist.

“HIT” movie series creator Sailesh Kolanu has written and directed all the “HIT” movies so far. “HIT: The First Case” ended on somewhat of a cliffhanger for the movie’s protagonist, police inspector Vikram Rudraraju. “Vikram: The 2nd Case” has a brief mention of what happened to Vikram, but otherwise, it’s a completely separate story. What each “HIT” movie has common so far is that it’s a story about a hotshot investigator in a police department called Homicide Intervention Team (HIT) located somewhere in India.

“HIT: The 2nd Case” follows police inspector Krishna “KD” Dev (played by Adivi Sesh), as he investigates the case of a twisted serial killer who dismembers his victims and leaves their various body parts at the crime scene where the killer’s other victims have been found. All of the victims are women n their 20s and 30s. The first known victim is a woman in her 20s named Sanjana, whose torso has been found in Visakhapatnam, India. KD makes a promise to Sanjana’s devastated, widowed father (played by Tanikella Bharani) that he will find the killer and make sure that there is justice for Sanjana.

In “HIT: The First Case,” police protagonist Vikram had post-traumatic stress disorder. In “HIT: The 2nd Case,” KD doesn’t have any psychiatric issues that affect how he does his job. However, KD’s biggest weakness is his arrogance. Early on in the movie, KD tells a group of reporters who ask for his comments about an unrelated case where KD captured a man who killed his own brother: “Generally, these criminals are very dumb.” It’s a comment that will come back to haunt him when the serial killer does things to outsmart KD.

KD’s cockiness also shows in how unkind he is to one his female colleagues. His ex-girlfriend Varsha (played by Komalee Prasad) has been appointed as one of his subordinates. He tells Varsha: “Seeing your face is very annoying to me.” The movie never really goes into details over why Varsha and KD broke up, but it was a romance that obviously did not end well. KD is very unhappy that Varsha has been assigned to help him with this serial killer case. KD also has his trusty police dog, a German Shepherd named Max, who is a constant companion when KD is on duty.

Whatever negative feelings that KD has toward Varsha, they are in direct contrast to his adoration of his girlfriend Aarya (played by Meenakshi Chaudhary), who is a confident and independent feminist who also expects chivalry from men. When KD asks Aarya to move in with him, she’s reluctant at first because she doesn’t want to give up having her own place. But she eventually changes her mind, because she and KD are in love with each other and want to build a life together.

Aarya works at female empowerment center called HER Welfare Association, which helps female victims of domestic violence, and offers other female-oriented services. A flashback scene in the beginning of the movie shows how, 20 years earlier, women from HER Welfare Association staged protests in support of a woman named Jhansi (played by Neela Ramana), who accused her husband Ram Prasad Koduri (played by Harsha Vardhan) of raping her, after he caught her cheating on him with another man. The HER Welfare Association plays a prominent role in the story.

Other characters who are connected to this story include KD’s female police sidekick Shradda (played by Pavani, also known as Pavani Reddy); Sanjana’s roommate Rajitha (played by Divya Narni); Rajitha’s boyfriend Kumar (played by Suhas); Sanjana’s childhood friend Raghavudu (played by Majili Shiva); KD’s police colleague Abilash (played by Maganti Srinath), nicknamed Abi; KD’s immediate supervisor Shinde (played by Brahmaji); and director of general police Nageswara Rao (played by Rao Ramesh).

Describing the rest of “HIT: The 2nd Case” would be giving away too much spoiler information. It’s enough to say that the movie is a non-stop ride of suspense and intrigue, with all of the actors playing their roles very well. The movie’s big showdown scene comes across as a little too contrived, but it’s still packed with a lot of tension. Mostly, “HIT: The 2nd Case” succeeds in how this investigation unfolds in a riveting way and how solving this mystery has a few fascinating surprises.

Wall Poster Cinema released “HIT: The 2nd Case” in select U.S. cinemas and in India on December 2, 2022.

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