Khakee- The Bihar Chapter Season 1 - Episode 2 __full__ Jun 2026
Netflix’s gritty crime drama Khakee: The Bihar Chapter opens not with a bang, but with a slow, simmering dread. Season 1, Episode 2, titled "The Hunter and the Hunted" (or simply continuing the narrative thread from the premiere), wastes no time plunging viewers deeper into the lawless badlands of Bihar. If the first episode introduced us to the iron-willed IPS officer Amit Lodha (Avinash Tiwary) and the terrifying rise of the gangster Chandan Mahto (Karan Tacker), Episode 2 is where the cat-and-mouse game officially begins.
In a pivotal scene, Singh secretly visits Chandan’s mother’s house to collect a bribe. The transaction is silent. No threats. No guns. Just an envelope passed under a lamp. This scene is devastating because it normalizes corruption. Singh tells his wife later that night: "If I don’t take this money, someone else will. And if I don't tell them where the raids are, they will burn my house." Khakee- The Bihar Chapter Season 1 - Episode 2
: Desperate and ambitious, Chandan finds a mentor in Abhyuday Singh (played by Ravi Kishan), a local goon with deep political ties. Netflix’s gritty crime drama Khakee: The Bihar Chapter
The pacing of Episode 2 is deliberate. It takes its time to build tension rather than resorting to constant gunfights. The background score is used sparingly, allowing the silence and the ambient sounds of rural India to create an atmosphere of unease. In a pivotal scene, Singh secretly visits Chandan’s
Episode 2 concludes with a haunting shot: Lodha looking at a map of the district, sticking red pins where murders have occurred. The map is nearly solid red. He picks up the phone and calls for backup from the Bihar Military Police.
The second episode of Khakee: The Bihar Chapter , titled " Chandanwa Ka Janm!
The episode picks up moments after the bloody conclusion of Episode 1. Chandan Mahto, who started as a glorified保镖 for a local politician, has just orchestrated the public murder of a rival gang member. The act is not just violent; it is theatrical. He shoots his rival while the man is handcuffed to a police constable, sending a clear message: in Sheikpura, the law does not apply to him.