Summary of this article
A hard-hitting take on patriarchy and marital rape within a typical Indian family.
Strong performances, especially from Divya Dutta, lift an uneven, sometimes heavy-handed narrative.
Triggering yet important, it sparks urgent conversations around consent and conditioning.
There's no easy way into Shashant Shah’s Chiraiya. It doesn't ease you in, doesn't soften its gaze and definitely doesn't comfort you. Streaming on JioHotstar, the six-episode series, written by Divy Nidhi Sharma, takes a hard look at something Indian homes have brushed aside for far too long—the dangerous belief that marriage automatically equals consent.
Set within a typical Indian family, the show leans heavily into familiar territory. A tightly-knit, supposedly educated household still runs on deeply misogynistic values. Women adjust, men are excused and everything uncomfortable is pushed under the rug in the name of "family".

At the centre of this world is Kamlesh, played by Divya Dutta. She is the ideal bahu on the surface—efficient, devoted, and completely shaped by the rules of the house she serves. But here's the thing: she is also a product of everything that's wrong within it. A woman who never got to complete her education is now upholding a system that continues to fail other women.
That's exactly where the show gets very triggering.
When Pooja (Prasanna Bisht), the new bride, enters the family, what unfolds is deeply unsettling. On her first night itself, she is subjected to repeated sexual violence by her husband, Arun, despite saying no multiple times. The show doesn't sensationalise it. If anything, it presents the trauma in a restrained, almost gentle way, which somehow makes it hit harder. You feel the weight of her silence, her isolation, and the slow suffocation that follows.

What's even more disturbing is everything that follows. It lands like a bruise you didn't realise you were carrying. Most women know that feeling, in some form or another—that moment when a boundary was crossed without permission, without warning and somehow the world just moved on as if nothing happened.
The "pehli galti" is not his. It becomes hers.
The idea that a woman must have done something wrong runs through the series like quiet poison. Every action of hers is questioned. Every resistance is labelled as disobedience. And Kamlesh, at least initially, becomes a part of that machinery. She asks Pooja to adjust, to stay silent, to protect the family's image.
It's frustrating to watch. There are moments where you just want to shake her and ask, how can you not see this?
But that's also the point.
The show captures the brainwashing of women within patriarchal systems with uncomfortable accuracy. Kamlesh isn't evil. She's conditioned. Dutta plays this internal conflict incredibly well, even when the writing makes her seem, at times, exasperatingly naive.
Her character arc becomes the emotional spine of the series. What makes a woman finally question everything she has believed in? What pushes her to unlearn decades of conditioning? Chiraiya attempts to answer that, even if the transition feels slightly rushed.

The men in the story are equally telling. Arun, played by Siddharth Shaw, embodies casual entitlement—the kind that doesn't even recognise itself as wrong. Faisal Rashid's Vinay, the "good husband", is softer but still complicit in his silence. Two brothers, two marriages, and yet the imbalance remains constant.
Sanjay Mishra, as the head of the family, brings a certain authority to the role, while the dadi stands out with a performance that feels lived-in and sharp.

There's also an interesting attempt to layer the narrative with mythological references, drawing parallels between age-old stories and present-day realities. It's a thoughtful idea, though it doesn't always land as effectively as intended. You're left wondering if it was necessary or if the story was strong enough on its own.
Where the series truly works is in opening up the conversation around consent and sex education. It asks basic but urgent questions: what is right, what is wrong, and who gets to decide that within a marriage. The introduction of the idea that "No" exists even after marriage feels both overdue and essential. At the same time, the storytelling often slips into stereotypical and overly dramatic territory. The portrayal of a second-tier city, the heightened emotions and the repetitive messaging can feel heavy-handed. The ending, in particular, leans into drama more than it needs to, making it feel staged rather than earned.

Yet, despite its flaws, the series stays with you. Maybe because it is so triggering. Maybe because it reflects a reality many would rather not confront. Or maybe because beneath all the clunkiness, there is something honest about what it's trying to say.
It also helps that the entire cast leans into their roles with conviction. Dutta, in particular, is unafraid to let Kamlesh come across as frustrating, even "dumb" at times, because that blindness is the point of the character. Bisht carries Pooja's trauma with a certain rawness, while Shaw's Arun feels disturbingly believable in his entitlement. Rashid brings quiet conflict to the "good husband" who still fails to act, and Mishra anchors the household with an ease that makes the patriarchy feel all the more normalised. Even the dadi adds texture to the family dynamic.
Chiraiya is not a perfect series. But it is an important one.
It's difficult and uncomfortable, but also a necessary watch. For that alone, it deserves your time.






















