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Netflix drops trailer for ‘Accused’, a psychological thriller on power and public judgment

24/02/2026 20:09 - UPDATED 24/02/2026 21:29
Accused Netflix

How quickly do we decide who is guilty? And what happens when the verdict arrives long before the truth? That’s the unsettling question at the heart of Accused, Netflix’s upcoming psychological drama that shifts the spotlight away from courtroom spectacle and toward something far more intimate — the emotional collapse that follows a public allegation.

Directed by Anubhuti Kashyap and produced by Dharma Productions, the film stars Konkona Sensharma and Pratibha Rannta in a story that unfolds inside the fragile space between reputation and reality. Netflix has now unveiled the official trailer, offering a tense first look at a film that promises ambiguity, restraint, and deeply personal stakes.

Accused: All the key details

A Reputation on the Edge: What Is Accused About?

The trailer offers a chilling glimpse into the life of Dr. Geetika Sen, a celebrated surgeon and gynaecologist whose world begins to unravel after allegations of sexual misconduct surface at her workplace. From that moment, everything shifts: colleagues look away, whispers become assumptions, and the stability she once commanded starts to fracture under relentless scrutiny.

But Accused isn’t framed as a sensational “case of the week.” Instead, it follows the emotional and psychological aftershocks — how suspicion spreads, how certainty hardens into verdicts, and how quickly a person can be reduced to a narrative. As public judgment intensifies, the pressure seeps into Geetika’s most intimate space: her marriage to Dr. Meera.

Not a Courtroom Spectacle — A Slow-Burn Psychological Spiral

Set against an atmosphere of quiet tension and emotional restraint, Accused resists melodrama. The trailer suggests a film built on silence, restraint, and the unnerving intimacy of being watched and weighed. Rather than rushing toward neat answers, the story lingers in discomfort — pushing the audience to sit with ambiguity and interrogate how bias shapes what we think we know.

That choice is central to the film’s identity: Accused doesn’t simply ask “what happened?” It asks something more unsettling: how do we decide what’s true when clarity is denied?

Director’s Vision: “Denied Clarity” as the Core Tension

Director Anubhuti Kashyap has described the film as an exploration of what happens when certainty disappears — when the world demands answers, but reality refuses to provide them. Speaking about the trailer, she said:

“With Accused, I wanted to explore what happens when we are denied clarity. The trailer reflects the emotional stillness and unease that runs through the film. I’m grateful to Netflix for backing a story that resists easy answers and allows ambiguity to breathe.”

It’s a statement that matches the trailer’s tone — a slow escalation of dread, where the loudest moments aren’t explosions but small ruptures: a look held too long, a question unanswered, a silence that suddenly feels accusatory.

Konkona Sensharma on Geetika: Control, Credibility — and Collapse

Konkona Sensharma leads the film as Dr. Geetika Sen, a woman who has built her life around competence and control — until that control becomes impossible to hold. Describing what drew her to the role, Sensharma said:

“Geetika is a woman used to control, of her work, her credibility, her space. What moved me was her internal collapse under scrutiny. I’m glad Netflix is bringing a story like this to audiences, one that trusts performance and silence over spectacle.”

That emphasis on “performance and silence” is exactly what makes Accused feel different. The drama isn’t powered by twists alone — it’s powered by the emotional realism of a life being dismantled in real time.

Pratibha Rannta on Meera: Love in the “Messy Space” of Doubt

If Geetika is the eye of the storm, Dr. Meera is the person forced to live inside it. The trailer frames their marriage as both sanctuary and battleground — the one place Geetika should feel safe, now strained by suspicion, pressure, and the invasive noise of public opinion.

Pratibha Rannta, who plays Meera, described her character as someone caught between loyalty and uncertainty:

“Playing Meera meant living in that messy space where you want to trust, but your heart isn’t sure. I’m so glad Netflix tells these kinds of real, complicated stories about women.”

It’s a striking promise: a story that doesn’t simplify women into symbols, but allows them to be contradictory, wounded, protective, and unsure — sometimes all at once.

Why Accused Could Hit Hard: Power, Bias, Vulnerability

Netflix describes Accused as a film that challenges conventional narratives by telling the story from the accused’s perspective — a lens rarely explored in Indian cinema. That shift matters, because it changes the emotional question the audience carries through the story.

Instead of watching from a comfortable distance, viewers are placed inside the uncertainty: the dread of being judged, the humiliation of being scrutinized, and the exhaustion of trying to prove yourself in a world that has already decided who you are. Through a measured directorial voice and restrained performances, the film navigates themes of power, vulnerability, bias, and emotional survival.

Release Date

Accused premieres on Netflix on February 27, 2026. Watch on Netflix:

Watch the Trailer

The trailer sets the tone for an intimate, unsettling slow-burn — a psychological descent where perception begins to reshape reality.

Stephen Ogongo

Stephen Ogongo

Stephen Ogongo is the main writer for Streamingmania and a senior manager at New European Media. Originally from Kenya, he previously founded and directed Afronews.eu and has taught journalism at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome. His work blends editorial expertise with a deep understanding of global media and storytelling.