Betrayal, revenge, humour: Prime Video releases trailer of new original series 'Rangeen'

Prime Video has released the trailer of a new series, Rangeen, starring Viineet Kumar Siingh ("Gangs of Wasseypur", "Mukkabaaz") and Rajshri Deshpande ("Sacred Games", "Trial By Fire").
Touted as a relationship drama, the series, premiering on July 25, is helmed by directors Kopal Naithani and Pranjal Dua, with writing contributions from Amardeep Galsin and Amir Rizvi. As per the makers, the series centres on Adarsh (Vineet), a "mild-mannered, middle-aged man, who embarks on a hilarious yet heart-wrenching quest for revenge after discovering his wife Naina's betrayal."
Aside from Siingh and Deshpande, Rangeen also features Raaruk Raina and Sheeba Chaddha.
According to Amardeep Galsin, they wanted the series to have the behaviour of a satire — "one that walks the tightrope between wit, irony and emotional honesty. This wasn't an easy story to tell, but working with producers Kabir Khan and Rajan Kapoor, who showed unwavering faith in our vision, directors Kopal Naithani and Pranjal Dua, and phenomenal artists including Vineet, Rajshri, Taaruk and Sheeba ji, helped bring Rangeen alive with all its awkwardness, depth and rawness intact."
Amir Rizvi added that it was a news article that inspired the idea. "What began as something quirky quickly unfolded into a layered, emotional, and surprisingly relatable story. Rangeen is about the lives we lead beneath the surface - identities we guard and the choices we justify," he says.
Siingh found the story "entertaining and emotionally resonant," and shared that he was excited by the prospect of playing "someone navigating a storm of betrayal and self-doubt, not with melodrama, but with restraint, humour, and quiet intensity. There's a raw honesty in the way the story unfolds, and that's what makes it both entertaining and emotionally resonant."
Deshpande adds that she loved that it doesn't offer easy answers. "What drew me to Naina was her unapologetic hunger — for desire, for meaning, for something beyond the boxes she's been put into. It doesn't reduce women to labels - it lets them be messy, searching, and painfully human."
Entertainment