Detective Sherdill Review: The Case Is Twisted, But The Detective Is Twistier

Detective Sherdil is a refreshing take on the mystery-comedy genre, led by a delightfully offbeat performance from Diljit Dosanjh. Set against the backdrop of Budapest, the film follows a murder investigation tangled in eccentric suspects, family secrets, and sharp one-liners.

KR

Written by Kashish Rajput

23 Jun 2025
5 min
Detective Sherdill Review: The Case Is Twisted, But The Detective Is Twistier

In a film world in higher demand for dark, brooding thrillers, Detective Sherdil is a breath of fresh air—a whodunit that replaces intensity with irreverence. Premiering on ZEE5 on 20th June 2025, Ravi Chhabriya's mystery-comedy is rich in anarchy, color, and humor as it follows an offbeat detective in a murder case in the capital city of Budapest. With its flip humor, vibrant overseas setting, and whodunit plot with offbeat characters and comedic red herrings, the film is ranked as number one among the new OTT releases due to its genre-bending strategy.

 

At the center of it all is a detective as unconventional in behavior as he is in dress. With the case that ties all the clues together in guffaws, he leads us on a ride. With the classic sleuth story woven together with sidesplitting comedy and cross-cultural quirkiness, Detective Sherdil offers a bright, family-oriented mystery that never gets too serious—and that's how it triumphs.

 

Whodunit with a Twist: Detective Sherdil’s Quirky Chase for the Truth
 

So, Detective Sherdil—Diljit Dosanjh doing his usual charming chaos—lands smack in the middle of Budapest, right? Some big-shot Indian telecom guy, Pankaj Bhatti, winds up dead. Everyone’s quick to scream hate crime. Classic. But, nope, enter Sherdil. The guy’s a total oddball, but weirdly brilliant. He teams up with Natasha (that’s Diana Penty, always looking way too put-together for a murder scene), and they start poking around.

 

Turns out, Bhatti’s family is basically a walking soap opera. The sons? Sketchy as hell. There’s a daughter lurking in the shadows, and the mom’s clutching secrets like her pearls. You think you’ve got it figured out, but then bam—comedy, red herrings, the whole nine yards.

 

And just when you’re about to blame the most obvious suspect (because, let’s be real, Bollywood loves a good scapegoat), Sherdil drops the mic: it’s Shanti, the daughter. Plot twist! She’s been through some stuff and, well, snapped. All the clues finally click, and Sherdil uncovers this elaborate family cover-up—they were trying to pin it all on poor Purvak. Messed up.

 

Justice gets its moment, Sherdil’s a hero, and—because they can’t resist a sequel hook—he’s off to Kenya for his next big adventure. Wouldn’t mind seeing what kind of chaos he stirs up there, honestly.

 

Clues, Chaos, and Charisma – A Detailed Review of Detective Sherdil

 

Look, in a cinematic sea where everyone’s tripping over themselves to out-brood the last guy, Detective Sherdil just barges in, hat tilted, beaming like he’s at a wedding, and totally flips the energy. Ravi Chhabriya’s making his directorial debut, and you know what? Dude’s swinging for the fences. Then there’s Diljit Dosanjh—man, the guy’s a walking firecracker. Seriously, you can’t not watch him. He could read the phone book and I’d still be glued to the screen.

 

Plot & Premise

 

So here’s the lowdown: Budapest. Lots of swanky old-world facades, river views, that whole Euro postcard vibe. Suddenly, this rich Indian telecom dude, Pankaj Bhatti, keels over—dead. Cops shrug and call it a hate crime. But, come on, way too easy, right? 

 

Enter Sherdil, who’s basically if you threw Hercule Poirot and Inspector Clouseau into a blender, sprinkled in some Punjabi swagger, and let him loose with a bag of weird evidence and even weirder logic. Natasha (Diana Penty) is there rolling her eyes hard enough to give herself a headache, but honestly, she’s the only reason Sherdil doesn’t end up chasing his own tail for two hours.

 

Performance & Characters

 

As for the cast? Diljit’s clearly having a blast. He’s goofy, sharp, drops lines that’ll catch you off guard. Diana Penty? She’s the straight shooter, keeps the goofiness from turning into a cartoon. Boman Irani does the whole “I’ve got secrets and probably a panic room” thing like a pro, Banita Sandhu’s all mysterious, and Chunky Panday swings by with that “I know a guy who knows a guy” vibe. Somehow, it gels.

 

Direction & Cinematic Appeal

 

Now, directing-wise, Chhabriya nails the tone. Doesn’t let things get all heavy and grim—thank god. Budapest pretty much steals a few scenes, too; pastel buildings, those perfect little frames, almost Wes Anderson-y but with extra spice. No dead air, either—it keeps throwing clues and fake-outs at you, then drops a twist when you think you’ve cracked it.

 

Themes & Twists

 

And about those twists: this isn’t just a slapstick party. There’s family baggage, buried secrets, stuff that’d make your local gossip auntie’s head spin. The reveal that Shanti (the daughter you barely notice) is the killer? Didn’t see that coming at all. The movie had me suspecting everyone except the actual culprit—so, props for that.

 

Music & Dialogues

 

Soundtrack bops, jokes actually land—never cringey. Sherdil’s got these little comebacks that’ll make your drink come out your nose, but he’s not a total clown; he actually gets stuff done. Oh, and bonus: they don’t drown every scene in background music. Thank you for sparing my ears.

 

Conclusion

 

Final word? Detective Sherdil isn’t your standard paint-by-numbers murder mystery. It’s breezy, funny, looks killer, and actually keeps you guessing. Diljit Dosanjh just runs the show, honestly. If you’re dying for a crime caper that won’t leave you feeling like you need therapy, this one’s your ticket.

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