Latest news with #LoveKills


Hans India
11-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Hans India
‘Black, White & Gray - Love Kills' review: Starts strong but fizzles out
SonyLIV's Black, White & Gray – Love Kills kicks off with a compelling premise, wrapping viewers in the intriguing world of crime, class divide, and manipulation. The series, directed by Pushkar Sunil Mahabal, follows Daniel Gray, a determined journalist who begins documenting a complex murder case involving four deaths and one prime suspect – a young man from a financially disadvantaged background, portrayed by Mayur More. Consisting of six episodes, the show lays its groundwork well. The accused, hailing from a poor family, falls for a rich girl whose father employs his own. Their secret one-night getaway triggers a chain of tragic events, beginning with the girl's sudden collapse. Assuming she's dead, panic ensues. What follows is a downward spiral involving three more murders, with the accused and the girl at the center of it all. Initially, the series seems to promise a gritty, emotionally charged crime drama. It touches on themes like social discrimination, corruption, and the misuse of power by the elite – all through the lens of a suspenseful murder mystery. However, despite this strong thematic base, Love Kills begins to lose its narrative grip post the second episode. The suspense unravels, scenes begin to feel disjointed, and the writing falters in tying together the emotional and investigative threads. Where the plot struggles, Mayur More's performance emerges as the saving grace. He delivers one of his career-best performances, portraying vulnerability, confusion, and desperation with raw honesty. His ability to embody the scapegoated youth lends the series a much-needed emotional weight, even when the script fails to deliver. The series makes an effort to spotlight societal issues like the stark division between rich and poor, the pressure to stay silent, and the dangerous consequences of lies spun into false narratives. Unfortunately, these messages are diluted by inconsistent pacing, poor editing, and lackluster direction. Black, White & Gray – Love Kills had the potential to be a standout crime thriller but ends up being a case of missed opportunity. While the intention was noble and the themes relevant, the weak execution and fragmented storytelling hold it back. Still, if you're watching for performances, Mayur More alone is worth your time.


India Today
10-05-2025
- Entertainment
- India Today
Black, White and Gray: The uncomfortable fiction of this highly rated crime series
Imagine this: you're cosied up on your couch, popcorn in hand, ready for your usual true crime binge. You hit play on SonyLIV's latest show 'Black, White and Gray - Love Kills', and ten minutes in, you're convinced you're knee-deep in a Netflix-style crime documentary. There's moody narration, dim lighting, flashback cuts, and lovers with secrets - thicker than a plot twist in any ordinary crime drama. But here's the catch: it's not a documentary. Yes, 'Love Kills' is pure fiction. But it's crafted so realistically, it'll have you googling about its just say the creators of 'Love Kills' knew exactly what they were doing. The show is structured like a true-crime series, each episode presenting a new narrative of love gone dark - think 'Indian Matchmaking' meets 'Crime Patrol' with HBO aesthetics. But, instead of interviews with real people, we get flawless acting and dramatisations so tight, you feel like you're watching newly discovered footage of someone's spiralled real-life relationship, only with an expectation of a 'Based on true events' line to pop in Nagpur 2020, this six-episode binge-worthy series throws you headfirst into the mind of Daniel Gray - a UK-based filmmaker with a serious obsession with unearthing the secrets India has buried. And let's just say, his documentary style is instantly gripping. Like, cancel-all-your-other-plans kind of gripping!advertisement The story kicks off with Gray investigating a jaw-dropping case involving a 26-year-old man accused of killing four people - and not just anyone - the woman he claimed he loved, a police officer, a young boy, and a cab driver. At first glance, 'Black, White and Gray' might look like your typical true crime docu-thriller with the whole 'what happened, who did it, and why' formula. But, hold on to it, because this show flips the script real quick. By the end of episode one, you're not asking 'whodunnit,' you're asking, 'Wait, what did I just watch?'This isn't your standard plot-twist-for-clout type of deal. The story refuses to be neatly packed into good vs evil. It's murky, it's messy, and it thrives in the uncomfortable middle. Truth? Not so black and white - and that's the whole slick dramatised re-enactments, the show almost had me buying into the story as pure fact - and honestly, it did it with more conviction and cinematic flair than most. The documentary filmmaker doesn't just scratch the surface - he goes full detective, interviewing everyone even remotely tied to the case: the lead investigator, grieving families, the girl's best friend, a woman cop, the hired hitman, the eyewitnesses, the accused's parents, and finally, the accused once you feel you're settled with your version of truth, believe everything that is shown, carefully listen to each version of the story, extract your own information from it, and right there you also begin to question the reality of all of it. However, no matter how convincing it gets, it hits you hard when you realise it's a mockumentary (Yes!) rather than a true-crime documentary, making it feel like a personal that, right there, that's where 'Love Kills' separates itself from the crowd. It's not just another crime show - it's a deep dive into obsession, truth, and the very blurry line between storytelling and reality. It says, 'What if we made it all up but made it look TOO real?' And somehow, it's scarier. Because now you're not just fearing real-life creeps, you're scared of how believable fiction can be. It blurs the lines, and in doing so, mirrors how messy and complicated real relationships can feel.'Black, White and Grey - Love Kills' is a mind game. It lures you in with its true-crime coat, then punches you in the gut with emotional depth and masterful storytelling. It's fiction, yes, but it'll haunt you like a cold case you never solved.