Forget the Soldier hero. Bobby Deol’s Baba Nirala is soft-spoken, tearful, and gentle—until he isn’t. In Season 2, his eyes go cold. There is a particular scene where he forces a devotee to drink poison in the name of "prasad." It is unwatchable yet brilliant. He proves that the scariest villains believe they are gods.
In the sprawling landscape of Indian web series, few have managed to poke the bear of blind faith, political nexus, and patriarchal hypocrisy quite like Aashram . When the hashtag trended, it wasn’t just about a show’s release; it was about a cultural nerve being struck.
Directed by Prakash Jha (a veteran of political cinema like Gangaajal and Apaharan ), Season 2 of Aashram doesn’t just continue the story—it deepens the rot. Here is a deep dive into why this season turned the series from a crime drama into a national conversation. If Season 1 introduced us to the charismatic yet monstrous Baba Nirala (Bobby Deol in a career-defining role), Season 2 shows the monster shedding his mask completely. #aashramseason2webseries
⭐⭐⭐⭐ (4/5) Streaming on: MX Player (Free with ads) Watch it for: Bobby Deol’s monstrous grace. Rajesh Tailang’s silent agony. The courage to tell a dangerous truth. Final Quote from the feature: "In Kashipur, the shoes are cleaned by the same hands that once built temples. That is the thesis of Aashram. It is not about one man; it is about our collective surrender."
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If you loved the slow-burn dread of Delhi Crime or the political fury of Nayak , you need to watch this. Just don’t expect a happy ending. In the world of #AashramSeason2Webseries, the only miracle is that the truth still fights to breathe.
For critics, Season 2 suffers from a slightly stretched runtime (10 episodes of ~40 minutes each). Some arcs feel repetitive—how many times can we see a corrupt cop take a bribe? However, the show’s strength lies in its performances. Tushar Pandey (as Satti) and Darshan Kumaar (as Haryanvi singer Hukum) elevate every scene. Yes. Absolutely. Forget the Soldier hero
Season 2 does not shy away from the grooming culture inside ashrams. The introduction of Babu Shah (Anupriya Goenka) as a lawyer trying to dismantle the empire adds a legal thriller layer. The show asks a terrifying question: What happens when the police station, the courtroom, and the temple all belong to the same man?