By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Facebook Instagram Youtube
gtbtoday.com
  • Home
  • GLOBAL
  • MOVIES
  • MUSIC
  • BUSINESS
  • LIFESTYLE
  • REVIEW
Reading: Ikka Movie Review: Sunny Deol and Akshaye Khanna Shine in a Formulaic Courtroom Drama
gtbtoday.comgtbtoday.com
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • GLOBAL
  • MOVIES
  • MUSIC
  • BUSINESS
  • LIFESTYLE
  • REVIEW
Search
  • Home
  • GLOBAL
  • MOVIES
  • MUSIC
  • BUSINESS
  • LIFESTYLE
  • REVIEW
Follow US
© 2026 GTBTODAY. All Rights Reserved
gtbtoday.com > Blog > REVIEW > Ikka Movie Review: Sunny Deol and Akshaye Khanna Shine in a Formulaic Courtroom Drama
REVIEW

Ikka Movie Review: Sunny Deol and Akshaye Khanna Shine in a Formulaic Courtroom Drama

GTB TEAM
Last updated: July 11, 2026 6:12 PM
GTB TEAM 4 Min Read
Share

The Netflix film leans heavily on the star-versus-star dynamic, offering a guilty pleasure despite its uneven narrative

Contents
The StoryThe PerformancesWhat Works and What Doesn’t

Packaged as a modern, gritty OTT thriller, Ikka leans heavily on the core DNA of commercial Hindi cinema, a formula that has increasingly been reduced to mere nostalgia. Fuelled by the star-versus-star dynamic, its narrative weight rests on the explosive chemistry between Sunny Deol and Akshaye Khanna. Physical dominance and moral integrity meet cold stillness and sharp smirks as Netflix, perhaps, wants to test and capture the appetite of a massive, single-screen mass audience. As a result, the recent box office success of Sunny and Akshaye seems to have prompted the makers to dress up a decade-old story to add a new section to the OTT library.

The Story

At its heart is Arjun Mehra (Sunny Deol), a towering, righteous defence lawyer who is forced into a moral trap when circumstances force him to defend a murder suspect, Shauryamann (Akshaye Khanna). Known to fight for what is right, Arjun’s gut feeling and past experience tell him that Shauryamann is in the wrong, but to save what is precious to him and his wife, Avantika (Dia Mirza), he needs to compromise on his values.

For a change, the courtroom drama forces a usually combative Sunny into a tight moral corner, with possibilities of exploring internal panic, doubt, and helplessness that his fans of yore can relate to. Early in the film, when Arjun says he wants butter chicken but his daughter roots for sushi, one feels Sunny has got a slightly new recipe to work with.

The Performances

It is the petite Tillotama Shome, who turns up with ‘dhai kilo ka hath’—the phrase usually associated with Sunny—as the rookie prosecution lawyer, Madhura. The commercial space is not exactly meant for her, but with her naturalistic intervention, Tillotama proves to be an efficient disruptor in the man’s world.

Post Dhurandhar, Akshaye’s facial contortions and twitchy mannerisms haven’t lost their menacing intensity. With lower stakes, Shourya certainly feels less dangerous than Rehman Dakait, but Akshaye turns him into an effective, mean and manipulative counterpoint to Sunny’s swagger.

What Works and What Doesn’t

Director Siddharth P. Malhotra takes a while to set up his pieces, but once writers Althea Kaushal and Mayank Tiwari begin dropping the twists, the narrative momentum pulls you in. The verbal volleys in the make-believe court provide a guilty pleasure. With his background in family dramas, Malhotra’s rhythm and pacing make it clear you are watching a charged domestic melodrama rather than the cold, clinical murder mystery that has become the norm these days.

The narrative meat lies in the triangle Avantika forms with Arjun and Shauryamann, but Malhotra fails to fully explore the emotional toll of these events on her, choosing to ignore the deeper fractures within that dynamic.

It is an uneven ride. While the penultimate twist lands with genuine surprise because it relies on intellect, hidden motives, and a clever manipulation of the facts, the final touch, however, is more about maintaining the image of Sunny as the undisputed ace as the makers abandon complex logic to ensure his character stands tall, vindicated, and emotionally triumphant.

Ikka is currently streaming on Netflix.

TAGGED: Akshaye Khanna, courtroom drama, Dia Mirza, Ikka, movie review, Netflix, Sunny Deol, Tillotama Shome
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Haniya Nafisa on Her Debut Album ‘Vaakkath’: Singing in the Kannur Dialect, Music Production, and Finding Her Voice
Next Article Why India Is Falling in Love with Bars Within Bars
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Most Popular

Jim Carrey Confirms Relationship With Girlfriend Minzi at 2026 Cesar Awards
Yami Gautam on Dhurandhar 2: ‘An Experience People Will Never Forget’
Swanand Kirkire on Arijit Singh’s Retirement: ‘Maybe He’ll Refresh and Come Back’
India’s Q3 GDP Grows 7.8% in New Data Series; Full-Year Estimate Raised to 7.6%

Rajinikanth and Kamal Haasan Reunite After 46 Years for Nelson’s Upcoming Film

By GTB TEAM

‘The Rise of Ashoka’ Movie Review: Sathish Ninasam’s Film Drowns in Formula

4 months ago

Singing in Tamil, Across Borders: The 9 Grader Nord Story

4 months ago

You Might Also Like

REVIEW

‘Baby Do Die Do’ movie review: In the mood for Mumbai

4 days ago
REVIEW

‘Young Washington’ Review: A Stodgy Historical Primer Steeped in Performative Patriotism

6 days ago
REVIEW

‘Nagabandham’ movie review: Abhishek Nama’s mythological fantasy is a loud, VFX-heavy bloodbath

1 week ago
REVIEW

Pritam and Pedro Movie review

1 week ago

Quick Link

  • Home
  • GLOBAL
  • MOVIES
  • MUSIC
  • BUSINESS
  • LIFESTYLE
  • REVIEW

Socials

Facebook Instagram Youtube

Company

  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms and Conditions

© 2026 GTBTODAY. All Rights Reserved 

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?