City of Dreams Season 2 Review: A Riveting Political Thriller with amazing Priya Bapat and Atul Kulkarni driving the ensemble cast and the story.




The main release from 2019, City of Dreams spun around front-facing assaults and double-crosses, difficulties and repartee. An endeavor on the life of Maharashtra's central minister Ameya Rao Gaikwad (Atul Kulkarni) prompts a deadly conflict between his aspiring and wise daughter Poornima (Priya Bapat) and his drug discombobulated and rash son Ashish (Siddharth Chandekar). Getting a couple of months after the happenings of the first season, City of Dreams Season 2 begins with Poornima Gaikwad (Priya Bapat) taking the central minister's seat. 

With her brother Ashish (Siddharth Chandekar) dead and father Ameya Rao Gaikwad also known as Saheb (Atul Kulkarni) incapacitated, Poornima is making a point to make whatever might seem most appropriate happen so the approaching political race results are in her and the gathering's favor. Supporting her in this is Saheb's previous helper and previous CM Jagdish Gurav (Sachin Pilgaonkar) and encounter expert cop-turned lawmaker Wasim Khan (Eijaz Khan). While her aims are honorable, privileged insights from Poornima's past clear a path into the political race, graciousness the hurt self-image of her dad who is never going to budge on rendering retribution on her for killing his son. 






City Of Dreams Season 2 is greater in scale than its predecessor. Numerous tracks are advancing parallelly all through this season, some of them are a continuation of events from season one, while others are new ones. Circumstances, either straightforwardly or by implication identified with governmental issues, advance into the story. Be it shakedown for influence/cash, moving loyalties, positive development tenders, or filthy games, everything transpires here. Independently, every one of the plots is invigorating and splendid actors convey these stories on their capable shoulders. 

You have Addinath Kothare making a passage as the idealistic, political pioneer who has confidence in humanism above all the other things, and Sushant Singh as the fearsome hooligan whose face breaks into a grin just when he sees cash. Then, at that point, there's Sachin Pilgaonkar as the dubious however strong senior forerunner and mentor to Poornima, and Eijaz Khan as the tangled new lawmaker who can't relinquish the cop in him. All things considered, it's a festivity of solid actors, driven by Priya Bapat and Atul Kulkarni. 


They know what should be done, and they follow through on that front. Performance considered, there's nothing to point at in City Of Dreams Season 2. Priya conveys a quiet and impactful depiction and is a treat to watch. Atul Kulkarni is threatening and makes you disdain Saheb – job well done. Eijaz is strong as Wasim and depicts the internal clash of the person delightfully. Where the show vacillates is in uniting every one of the narratives. In attempting to build up various features of the story, the center around the fundamental plot goes off course. 

A few things are unsurprising, some superfluously added. There are sufficient turns in the story, as is normal from a political thrill ride. The show keeps you snared, yet 10 episodes is a brief time frame to do equity to each sub-plot thus, there are many deciding details. All said and done, City of Dreams Season 2's climax is the superstar. It's bolting and unforeseen. Nagesh Kukunoor conveys a masterstroke in the season finale and establishes the vibe for another season, ideally with more grounded stories for the recently presented characters.

Rating:- 3.5/5

Now streaming on Disney+ Hotstar.


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