‘KISSA COURT KACHEHARI KA’ REVIEW | 13 March, 2026

Lovely Films’ Kissa Court Kachehari Ka (UA) is the story of our legal system and how a common man can get exasperated while fighting a legal case. The story is set in Meerut. Satyendra Mishra (Rajesh Sharma) is an honest lawyer in Meerut. Bansal (Brijendra Kala) is also a lawyer in Meerut, but he is corrupt. One day, autorickshaw driver Deepak (Sanjeev Jaiswal) is killed in an accident. Or was he murdered? Once Satyendra Mishra is convinced, it was a murder, he ensures that the guilty is punished. The defence lawyer in the case is Bansal. Who is the killer and what was the motive behind the murder? The hardships which Satyendra Mishra has to face in court and with the legal system form the crux of the matter.

Rajnish Jaiswal has written a story which is routine and offers no novelty. One has seen earlier films with the difficult legal system as the backdrop. One has also seen the twisted legal system being the backdrop of a sub-plot in several films. Hence there is no freshness in the story. Rajnish Jaiswal’s screenplay is hackneyed and, therefore, offers neither thrill nor entertainment to the viewers. The drama unfolds in a predictable fashion. Even the climax is not half as exhilarating as it should’ve been. Dialogues are commonplace.

Rajesh Sharma does well as advocate Satyendra Mishra. Sanjeev Jaiswal is so-so as autorickshaw driver Deepak. Anju Jadhav is okay as Deepak’s wife, Pooja. Brijendra Kala does an average job as advocate Bansal. Krishna Singh Bisht lends ordinary support as Bhoopi. Neelu Kaur Kohli is natural in the role of Satyendra Mishra’s wife, Chanda. Lokesh S. Singh is so-so as minister Bharat Choudhry. Susheel Parashar provides routine support as judge Kanoon Kumar. Mukesh Kumar is passable as Deepak’s friend, Rajendra. Kapil Kumar (as Vicky), Syed Ubaid Hussain (as Nitin Das), master Shlok Ashwin Bayes (as Satyendra Mishra’s son, Bablu), Agast Anand (as Dr. Asthana), Jitendra Yadav (as Chakravarti), Sanjeev Kumar Thakur (as Chanda’s brother, Ladu), Nandini Singh (as Nikita) and the rest do as desired.

Rajnish Jaiswal’s direction is below the mark. Pravesh Mallick’s music is ordinary. Lyrics (by Pravesh Mallick and Kundan Vidyarthi) are routine. Alias Kalnad Kader’s choreography is dull. Sukumar Dutta’s background music is not of standard. Dharmendra Biswas’ cinematography is average. Narendra Kumar Kuswaha’s art direction is okay. Santosh Ramlochan Mandal’s editing needed to be sharper.

On the whole, Kissa Court Kachehari Ka is a dull fare which will go largely unnoticed.

Released on 13-3-’26 at Gem (daily 1 show) and other cinemas of Bombay thru Panorama Studios. Publicity & opening: poor. …….Also released all over. Opening was dull everywhere.