Genre: Crime Documentary (English/Netflix)  

Directors: Leena Yadav and Anubhav Chopra  

Rating: 4.5/5

On comparing with the other crime documentaries, Netflix House of secrets: The Burari death goes far off  the details and direct the sociological and psychological aspects of the case which has become the national headline in 1st July, 2018. In this documentary 11 members were found dead hanging in living room. Three generations were found dead and there were no sign of any chaos found in the house. Thousands of the local people surrounded the area and many of them were on the rooftop to watch the incident. I thought that it would be like any other crime documentary but this documentary grabbed my attention in the nick of time. This crime documentary is totally different as compared to the other crime documentaries because there was no sign of any unknown individual entering in the house on the day of crime. That was something exciting which made me to watch the whole documentary. 

House of Secrets: The Burari Death has been divided into three critical episodes-the first portrays the occurrence, the second one investigates the investigations and the decision. The most critical and the most advantageous is the third episode that ventures out in front of the columnists and the police discoveries and does the mental and humanistic autopsy of the case. Besides, the fitting title does equity to the show that digs into the story and figures out how to give you the drags even without uncovering the recording of the real wrongdoing.

Contrasting to other crime documentaries, House of Secrets puts forth no attempt to invigorate rush or horror however all things being equal, it avoids sentimentality and investigates the case with much detachment and awareness. A large portion of the area and occasion film displayed in the narrative is acquired from the stock film taken at the hour of the crime. Generally, the whole background is a mix of documented film and chilling meetings that sets the stage on what is to follow. The documentary series delves in farther than whatever the journalist called just 'strange' and endeavors to accomplish an infer that is more useful and reasonable by including the points of view of clinical hypnotic specialists and clinicians.

The experts pose the right inquiries on what might have prompted the destruction. Rather than marking the case as 'shared psychosis', there should be some significant trigger that drove individuals from three ages to follow Lalit blindfold (in a real sense and metaphorically) to their demises. They even discussion regarding the reason why the family would hold a gigantic commitment party for their girl only 10 days before the crime. It very well may be convincingly concluded that the arranging was not engaged with deaths however was accidental. Sadly, the family really hung tight for the soul of the grandfather to come and save them. Unexpectedly, it won't ever show up! While everything is guess, it is the entire conclusion that one can get.

At the last, House of Secrets is a mindfully composed and professional documentary series that has veteran A.R. Rahman's and his group Qutub-e-Kripa mind blowing music score to back it up. The new film in mix with the chronicled media film is to the point of causing you to feel invigorated in the backstreet of Burari while you remember the secret and injury of the hair-raising, feature getting crime.