Tag: Special Ops

  • Vamsi Murthy wraps up his Disney+ Hotstar journey

    Vamsi Murthy wraps up his Disney+ Hotstar journey

    MUMBAI: Call it a season finale worth bingeing. After an unforgettable four-season run, Vamsi Murthy has announced his exit from Disney+ Hotstar, wrapping up a chapter that reads like a streaming hit, complete with plot twists, high stakes and creative cliffhangers.

    As executive director and marketing head, Murthy helped script some of Hotstar’s most successful campaigns, cementing its reputation as India’s home of entertainment and sport. From building massive originals like Aarya, Criminal Justice, Special Ops and Taaza Khabar, to steering cricket fever through World Cups, his marketing playbook turned content into cultural conversations.

    Under his leadership, the platform revamped its entertainment marketing model, driving growth across brand love, viewership and subscriptions. The results showed improved ROI, award wins at Promax Asia, Kyoorius and Indian Telly Streaming Awards, and a brand that consistently set the tone for pop culture moments.

    Before Hotstar, Murthy’s career reel rolled through BookMyShow, ZEE5, Myntra, MakeMyTrip and Reliance Communications, marking a two-decade journey across India’s biggest consumer brands.

    Signing off, Murthy called his time at Hotstar “nothing short of a blockbuster,” thanking colleagues and mentors who made the ride special. As for what’s next, he’s keeping the suspense alive, promising a new chapter soon. Because in true entertainment style, every great show deserves a thrilling sequel.

  • ‘Special Ops’ taut storytelling makes it a must watch

    ‘Special Ops’ taut storytelling makes it a must watch

    MUMBAI: Special Ops, Hotstar’s latest eight-part original series released on the platform on 17 March, is special. Really special. A fast-paced, gripping espionage thriller, inspired from true events over the past two or three decades of terrorist attacks in India; it is the tale of a Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) officer Himmat Singh (a role marvellously essayed by the 53-year-old stage, TV and film actor Kay Kay Menon) and his two-decade-long hunt for a terrorist who he believes has masterminded several of those bombings and dastardly acts. 

    Like Jason Bourne – the CIA operative from the famed movie franchise, which has grossed more than $1.5 billion at the box office – he has the system ranged against him. A ragtag team of five agents operating in Istanbul, Tehran, Dubai, Sharjah and Tbilisi helps him track the movements of those close to the mastermind, in the hope that someday he will capture him. Along the way, he splurges close to Rs 28 crore on keeping the operation going in west Asia, which then leads to an enquiry commission being drawn up against him.

    The series begins in the present with the two-men audit team – played by Parmeet Sethi (Mr Chadda)  and Kali Prasad Mukherjee (DK Banerjee) – probing Himmat Singh about alleged irregularities in his department’s accounts. Himmat Singh’s responses to the duo’s  questions helps take the story forward; a tack which is used over eight episodes, interspersed with flashbacks, introducing the various characters (both good and bad), about what happened over the years.  

    Episode one then moves onto the attack on the Indian parliament in New Delhi in December 2001. The attempt in real life was foiled, the five terrorists allegedly belonging to the Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed were killed, but at the expense of the lives of nine from the Indian side, including police, security personnel and a gardener. The special service cell of the Delhi police arrested four individuals Mohammed Afzal Guru, Shaukat Husain Guru and SAR Geelani in connection with the attacks.

    In Special Ops, Himmat Singh believes that there were actually six rogues; a theory to which not many in his department, the secret service, the ministries and defence establishment subscribe to. The sixth terrorist who escapes at the end of the first episode was the lynchpin behind the attack.

    It is then that Himmat Singh – who is married to Saroj (played by Gautami Kapoor) and has a daughter Pari – puts together his team and begins his vigil for Ikhlaq Khan, the mastermind which is chronicled over the next seven episodes.

    Written by veteran scripter Neeraj Pandey (A Wednesday, Special 26, Toilet Ek Prem Katha), Deepak Kingrani and Benazir Ali Fida, who have effectively portrayed the inner workings, bureaucracy, politicos and the machinations of the government and secret service, while also showing Himmat as a doting family man committed to keeping his country safe from terror attacks as well as his own daughter during her first romance. Special Ops has gone where not many series from India have gone before.

    Himmat Singh throughout the series has his home base in India where he is assisted by cop Abbas Shaikh (Vinay Pathak) and his assistant Karan (Karan Ashar) while his five agents – played by Farooq Ali (Karan Tacker), Balakrishnan (Vipul Gupta), Avinash (Muzammil Ibrahim), Juhi (Saiyami Kher) and Ruhani  (Meher Vij) race across continents to nab the elusive international terrorist Ikhlaq Khan. The latter is known to one Hafiz Ismail (Sajjad Delafrooz) who is known to Dubai-based businessman Ismail Hasan) who Farooq befriends in order to get to Ikhlaq.  

    Adding to the plot is a character called Noor Baksh (SM Zaheer) (based in Pakistan  and he has been involved in terrorists acts along with Ikhlaq in India over the years) who has plans to do another bombing in India in the present moment through two Muzaffarnagar riot victims  Sadia Qureshi  (Divya Dutta) and Farah (Pakkhi Gupta).

    The writing is taut, has enough twists and turns to keep you gripped over the eight episodes. Yes, at times, the over-extended focus on the personal lives of Himmat Singh and his agents tends to slow the pace down and distract from the main plot. But Pandey and his team probably thought that was needed to work as relief for the audience.  

    Some of the characters, while finely chiseled, appear clichéd, especially like the one of Ismail Hassan (Rajat Kaul). 

    The end, of course, turns out as expected because the writing leaves enough nuggets for you to guess who the real Ikhlaq Khan is.

    Direction is finely handled with five episodes out of the eight being helmed by Pandey, with three by Shivam Nair.

    The cinematography by Sudhir Palsane – who has worked with Pandey on other projects like Baby and MS Dhoni – has resulted in stunning visuals of the various locations, even as the editing by Praveen Kathikuloth keeps the story racy enough for you to want to binge watch Special Ops.

    Special Ops is Kay Kay Menon’s Himmat Singh’s canvas and he paints it well with an extremely earnest performance as a RAW officer who is a master strategist. Tacker rises above himself in his essaying of the role of Farooq, by far his best performance. Pathak, Kaul,  Delafrooz  , Kapoor, Dutta and Sharad Kelkar (who plays security ops person) – all  have  brought realism to their characters. 

    Overall, Special Ops is a series which is worth a watch. So if you are at home, subscribe to Hotstar to be engrossed for six hours of non-stop edge of the seat thrilling entertainment. It will be time well spent. 

  • The biggest focus area for Hotstar is big scale-big idea-high concept series: Gaurav Banerjee

    The biggest focus area for Hotstar is big scale-big idea-high concept series: Gaurav Banerjee

    MUMBAI: Streamers in India are now bombarded with ‘original’ content on over-the-top (OTT) platforms. With so many shows, the only way to make a mark is by telling stories that matter and offering narratives in their comfort language. Hotstar gets both of it right. The late entrant in the game of originals does want to win the crown with ‘x’ number of shows but with quality stories. Hotstar is also ready to tap the regional market this year.

    It has launched its first masterstroke of the year, Special Ops. The eight-episode series marks the digital debut of filmmaker Neeraj Pandey. The seventh series under Hotstar Specials is not targetted at any particular audience segment but the makers hope everyone watches it, as Star India Hindi Entertainment head Gaurav Banerjee said.

    Banerjee noted the importance of the full-length trailer as it would draw more viewers if it receives a good response. Given Pandey's stature and calibre, the OTT platform is depending on those aspects to pull viewers this time.

    Banerjee said that they would leverage the reach of the Star network and Hotstar to make this widely known to fans and to let them know that something “exciting and interesting” is now available. He is also hopeful of IPL giving a further boost to its attraction.

    In a candid chat, Banerjee also spoke on Hotstar’s strategy going forward.

    Edited excerpts:

    Thriller seems to be a common genre in the OTT ecosystem. How is Special Ops different from other shows?

    We can’t know what other people are doing. Therefore, we have stuck to the simple task of believing in our showrunner, his story and the knowledge of his craft. We've been talking to Neeraj and developing the show for the last 18 months. We have to believe that the story that we are telling has relevance, so viewers should see it and want to watch it. And you must believe that the storyteller has a lot of conviction. They're really motivated and inspired to tell that story.

    How many shows do you have in the pipeline for the rest of the year? What are the new formats you are looking at?

    We have several shows in the pipeline. But we are not defining our success by quantity, only by quality. So we don't want to build a big library. We don't want to drop a show every week. What we really want to do is to have some shows which viewers deeply care about or that hugely excites them. I think for us, that is success. So we have a deep pipeline of ideas that excites us but we want those to be really extraordinary. We don't want to build this business on the strength of library or frequency of launches.

    How are you looking at digital original movies?

    We have done a couple. But the biggest focus area for us is big scale-big idea-high concept TV series. I think that's something that that in India is pretty new. We have been at it for the last 13 months. That's what we will truly stay committed to. We want to learn how to make those well, market them, write them differently and cast them properly.  

    What is your plan in the regional market? Will you come out with regional shows this year?

    We will this year. So I'm happy to confirm that Hindi will not be the only language in which we will be running productions. We want to run productions and make original content on Hotstar in other Indian languages as well. There are already two Tamil shows which we are in very advanced production right now.

    Are you only focusing on South Indian languages?

    Tamil is a huge market for us. In the Hotstar India Watch Report which we reported a while ago, we said that Big Boss Tamil was the most-watched piece of content. I think the Telugu market is important as well. We have big creative teams across many Indian languages.  We have a very strong presence in Bengal with Star Jalsha, great presence in Marathi with Star Pravah, we have the best Malayalam channel Asianet. So I think all those are very powerful content engines and people everywhere are looking for ideas and talking to us and hopefully, we will see a lot of that come through.

    What viewership trends have you noticed?

    I think viewers are looking for variety. And what has worked very well for us is that we have offered a wide range of content. I think people have liked that. The second thing is something that really connects, that people watch a lot. So, I think engagement is fabulous. They can watch a long complex drama when they find the content is engaging and they haven't seen earlier. 

  • Hotstar Specials launches ‘Special Ops’

    Hotstar Specials launches ‘Special Ops’

    MUMBAI: Hotstar Specials, along with Friday Storytellers, is set to launch the biggest spy action thriller of 2020, Special Ops. This fast-paced 8-episode series is based on the role of Indian intelligence in a series of real terror attacks that India faced over the last 19 years. Starting with the 2001 attack on Indian Parliament, the show goes back and forth in time covering several other events including 26/11, Kashmir terror attacks amongst others; and the chase for the single mastermind behind these attacks – making it the longest manhunt in Indian Intelligence for India’s deadliest enemy.

    The show has been written by Neeraj Pandey, Deepak Kingrani and Benazir Ali Fida; all of them have spent years carefully researching the ways of Indian intelligence. Every aspect of the show has been conceptualized and created to deliver a high-quality thrilling experience. Keeping with the scale, it has been shot across numerous international locales including Turkey, Azerbaijan, Jordan and India. 

    Special Ops features an ensemble cast including acclaimed actor Kay Kay Menon along with the powerhouse talents such as Karan Tacker, Saiyami Kher, Divya Dutta, Vinay Pathak, Muzammil Ibrahim, Meher Vij, Vipul Gupta, Sajjad Delafrooz, Parmeet Sethi, Gautami Kapoor, Sana Khaan, Sharad Kelkar, KP Mukherjee, and many others.

    Specials Ops is slated to release on 17 March 2020 in seven languages on Hotstar VIP.

    STAR India Hindi Entertainment head Gaurav Banerjee said: “Neeraj Pandey is one of the most distinguished filmmakers of our time and we are delighted to partner with him for his digital debut. Our goal with Special Ops is to create an action-packed spy series that’s at par with global standards when it comes to quality and scale; it takes forward the Hotstar Specials agenda of bold and varied story telling on a big scale.”

    Neeraj Pandey, who has created the show, added: “Special Ops is a story I thought of many years ago – it’s a big idea that required a lot of patience and research to pursue and develop. With newer and exciting formats of storytelling gaining prominence, we were able to build a fabulous team to create this larger-than-life story that strings together many real events from the past two decades. For the first time in the history of Indian entertainment, the 2001 Indian Parliament Attack has been recreated on celluloid. That’s just one of the many big moments from the show.”

    “A big idea requires the right scale and platform to bring it altogether. This is an exciting partnership for us and has many firsts – first digital series from Friday storytellers, Neeraj’s first on the digital platform and our association with the largest OTT Hotstar. The show has the right mix of scale, talent and pace to enthral and entertain the audiences,” said Shital Bhatia who has produced the show.