‘Raakh’ tops charts as Prime Video’s #1 Non-English sequence worldwide
Inside days of its world premiere on ‘Prime Video’, ‘Raakh’ has emerged as one of the vital acclaimed and talked-about ‘Prime Authentic’ sequence. The eight-episode fictional crime drama, which launched worldwide on June 12, has been appreciated as a nuanced and delicate account of the complicated interaction of morality, crime and justice and the grief that haunts these left behind.
The sequence, produced by ‘Endemol Shine India’ in affiliation with ‘BhaDiPa’ has resonated with viewers throughout geographies and gone on to change into Prime Video’s #1 non-English sequence worldwide, trending at #1 throughout 23 nations and reaching the Prime 10 in 60 nations. Additional underscoring its widespread attain, ‘Raakh’ has additionally emerged as the most important ‘Indian Authentic’ debut on ‘Prime Video India’ prior to now two years, inside two weeks of its launch.
Broadly praised by critics, audiences and business voices alike, ‘Raakh’ has earned acclaim, establishing itself as a haunting and unforgettable story and setting a brand new benchmark for crime thrillers. The sequence has been lauded for its performances; be it Ali Fazal’s nuanced ‘career-defining’ position, Sonali Bendre’s stellar flip as a grieving mom, Aamir Bashir’s deeply transferring portrayal of a distraught father and the universally applauded work of Akash Makhija and Ramandeep Yadav, who’ve introduced a very menacing high quality into their renditions of Babu and Rajjo. Collectively, the solid has dropped at life a profound and immersive narrative that continues to spark conversations and stick with audiences lengthy after the credit roll.
Prosit Roy, director and government producer of ‘Raakh’, stated, “After we first got down to make ‘Raakh’, we carried a quiet conviction that audiences had been prepared for a narrative that didn’t shrink back from the burden of tragedy. We needed to craft one thing that lived within the areas between justice and grief, one thing that honoured the complexity of loss and the ethical reckonings that comply with in its wake. To see this story resonate so profoundly, not simply in India however internationally, is humbling.”




