Accused: Netflix’s Next Film Will Make You Uncomfortable

Anubhuti Kashyap is returning to a hospital setting, but this time she is not interested in medical jargon or easy moral victories. Her new Netflix film, Accused, looks far more uncomfortable and far more necessary. After Doctor G, which explored gender dynamics with humor, Kashyap now moves into darker, riskier territory. She asks a question Indian audiences rarely confront. What happens when the accused is a woman?

The trailer, unveiled Saturday morning, wastes no time pulling viewers into Geetika’s unraveling life. Konkona Sen Sharma plays a respected surgeon in London whose world collapses after an email accuses her of predatory behaviour. It is a chilling premise because the accusation arrives quietly but detonates loudly. Her credibility, her relationships, and her identity begin to fracture in ways that feel painfully real.

The tension intensifies with Pratibha Ranta’s Meera, Geetika’s partner, who is preparing to adopt a child with her. The allegations poison their bond. Doubt creeps in. And Kashyap smartly focuses on emotional fallout rather than courtroom theatrics. The hospital corridors feel colder. Colleagues become distant. The internet becomes hostile.

What makes Accused especially bold is its refusal to follow familiar gender scripts. Indian cinema has often portrayed women as victims of harassment. Showing a woman on the other side of such allegations disrupts comfortable assumptions. It forces audiences to sit with ambiguity instead of offering easy sympathy.

Konkona is an astonishing actress and she has done wonderful work in the past. Still, this could be one of her most layered performances. Produced by Dharmatic Entertainment, Accused premieres on Netflix on February 27. It already feels like the kind of film that will provoke debate rather than comfort.