Kohrra Season 2 trailer brings Barun Sobti to Dalerpura as he sets to uncover a darker, introspective mystery with Mona Singh. Directed by Sudip Sharma and Faisal Rahman, the series will stream from February 11.
The trailer for Kohrra Season 2 slips back into Netflix’s bleak Punjabi hinterland with chilling confidence, announcing that this chapter will be darker, denser and far more inward-looking than before. Set in Dalerpura, a town seemingly built on half-truths and buried secrets, the new season opens with a murder that feels less like an isolated crime and more like a rupture, a woman found dead in her brother’s barn, with suspicion pooling uncomfortably close to her own home.
_Kohrra 2_ trailer out
From its very first frames, the trailer of the new season of
_Kohrra_ leans into atmosphere over exposition. Mist rolls in, doors creak open, and conversations trail off mid-sentence, establishing a mood where everyone knows something, and no one is telling the whole story. The suspects form a tight, unsettling circle- the grieving brother (Anurag Arora), the husband under scrutiny (Rannvijay Singha), and a community that appears complicit through silence rather than action.
At the centre of this uneasy landscape is Barun Sobti’s Amarpal Garundi, returning but not quite the same man audiences remember. The trailer makes it clear that Garundi is trying to outrun his past, relocated from Jagrana and placed under a new commanding officer. But Kohrra’s world doesn’t allow clean slates. Sobti’s Garundi appears more withdrawn this time, watchful, burdened, and increasingly introspective, as if the weight of previous cases has settled into his bones.
Enter Mona Singh’s Dhanwant Kaur, a striking counterpoint. The trailer positions her as composed, precise and emotionally guarded, a leader who speaks sparingly but commands attention through stillness rather than force. Where Garundi follows instinct, Dhanwant works through control. Their partnership promises tension, restraint and an intriguing push-and-pull between method and impulse. It’s a dynamic that feels less like buddy policing and more like two fractured people circling the same truth from opposite ends.
The mystery deepens
What stands out is how little the trailer rushes. There are no flashy reveals or spoon-fed twists. Instead, it teases moral ambiguity, fractured relationships and the quiet violence of complicity. Grief, guilt and buried histories seem just as central to the investigation as forensic evidence. This is a world where the real mystery isn’t just who committed the crime, but how many people helped hide it.
Visually, Kohrra Season 2 remains faithful to its brooding identity with muted colours, long silences, and frames heavy with implication. The trailer suggests that the investigation will peel away not just the layers of the case, but the emotional armour of its investigators as well.
With Sudip Sharma stepping into the director’s chair alongside Faisal Rahman, and the writing team returning with their trademark restraint, the trailer signals a season less interested in shock and more invested in slow, psychological unravelling.
If Season 1 was about uncovering a crime, Season 2 looks poised to explore the cost of truth itself. In Dalerpura, it seems, it doesn’t take much to commit a crime, just a village willing to look away.
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