Gyaarah Gyaarah Season 1 Complete Pack -
Gyaarah Gyaarah is a 2024 Indian Hindi-language fantasy-thriller web series that premiered on ZEE5 on August 9, 2024. Directed by Umesh Bist, the series is an official adaptation of the highly acclaimed South Korean drama Signal (2016). Series Overview
The show is an investigative drama set across three decades—1990, 2001, and 2016—blending elements of mystery, science, and mysticism.
Premise: Two police officers from different eras are connected by a mysterious, defunct walkie-talkie that springs to life every night at exactly 11:11 PM for just 60 seconds.
The Mission: By exchanging information across time, they attempt to solve long-buried cold cases and deliver justice, often discovering that changes in the past have significant consequences for the present.
Setting: Most of the narrative takes place against the backdrop of the hills of Uttarakhand. Main Cast and Characters
The series features a strong ensemble cast recognized for their nuanced performances: Gyaarah Gyaarah (TV Series 2024– ) - IMDb
Title: The 11th Hour
The rain in Dehradun had a way of washing away secrets, but that night, it seemed determined to dig them up.
Vikrant Singh, a jaded police officer with a perpetual scowl and a flask of whiskey hidden in his drawer, sat alone in the dilapidated Major Crime Unit office. It was 11:00 PM. The station was empty, save for the rhythmic drumming of rain against the corrugated tin roof.
He stared at the object on his desk. It was wrapped in brown kraft paper, tied with a fraying red string. No return address. Just his name scrawled in a handwriting that made his blood run cold.
It was a package. A complete set.
Vikrant’s hands trembled slightly as he pulled the string. The brown paper fell away, revealing a stack of worn, leather-bound journals and a single, sealed envelope marked with a stark, red stamp: Gyaarah Gyaarah – Season 1. gyaarah gyaarah season 1 complete pack
He knew the legend. Every cop in Uttarakhand did. They called it the "Gyaarah Gyaarah" protocol—a glitch in time, a mysterious communication channel that opened only between 11:00 PM and 11:10 PM. It was the domain of DSP Shailesh Bisht, a brilliant officer from the late 1990s who had vanished under mysterious circumstances.
Vikrant had spent the last decade trying to prove the stories were nonsense. He was a man of facts, of forensics, of cold, hard evidence. But the case file on his desk—the unsolved "Queen of the Hills" murder—had driven him to the brink of madness. He had exhausted every lead. He had nothing left but the impossible.
He opened the envelope. Inside was a letter written on yellowed police stationery dated 1999.
“To the one who finds this: You are looking for the truth in the dark. But the dark is where the truth hides. I am leaving you the complete pack. Every transmission. Every clue. Every mistake we made, so you don’t have to make them again. The line opens at 11:00. Don't be late.”
Vikrant looked at the clock on the wall. The second hand ticked relentlessly. 10:59:50.
He opened the first journal. It was filled with meticulous notes, crime scene photos that hadn't been digitized, and transcripts of radio chatter. It was the "Season 1" of Shailesh Bisht’s life—a chronicle of a case that mirrored Vikrant’s own, twenty years apart.
10:59:58. 10:59:59. 11:00:00.
Static crackled from the old wireless radio set in the corner of the room—a relic Vikrant kept for decoration. He spun around. The dial began to glow with an eerie, amber light.
A voice cut through the static. It was calm, authoritative, and underscored by the sound of a different rainstorm, two decades past.
"Major Crime Unit, DSP Shailesh Bisht responding. Do you copy? Over."
Vikrant grabbed the receiver, his heart hammering against his ribs. He pressed the transmit button. "This is Inspector Vikrant Singh. Year 2024. Who is this?" Episode 1 — "Shuruaat" — Introduction of protagonist,
There was a pause. Then, the voice returned. "Singh. I’ve been waiting for you. Did you get the pack?"
Vikrant looked at the journals. "I have it. The 'Gyaarah Gyaarah' file. All of it."
"It’s not just a file, Singh," Shailesh said, his voice distorted by time. "It’s a bridge. You’re chasing the Queen of the Hills killer. In '99, we thought we had him. We were wrong. We caught the wrong man. An innocent man, Raghav, spent twenty years in prison because of a mistake I made in the last minute of our window."
Vikrant froze. Raghav. That was the name of the suspect he had just released due to lack of evidence. The circle was closing.
"I can't change what happened to Raghav," Shailesh continued, urgency creeping into his tone. "But you can stop the man who actually did it. He’s still out there. In your time, he’s old, but he’s still killing. Look at page 42 of the pack. Now."
Vikrant flipped furiously through the leather journal. Page 42 contained a sketch of a man with a jagged scar running down his left cheek. Beside it, a note in Shailesh’s handwriting: He watches the funerals.
"He integrates himself into the grief," Vikrant whispered, the realization hitting him like a punch. "The mourner we questioned last week... the one with the scar. We let him go."
"He’s a chameleon," Shailesh said. "In 1999, we missed him by seconds. You have the advantage of hindsight now. You have the complete pack. Use it. The transmission ends in two minutes."
Vikrant scanned the journals. They weren't just notes; they were a roadmap of failures. Shailesh had documented every step of his investigation, every wrong turn, preserving them so that one day, someone could take the right path.
"The cemetery," Vikrant said, his voice steady now. "There’s a burial tonight. He’ll be there."
"Go," Shailesh commanded. "And Singh? Tell my daughter I never gave up. Tell her I found the truth in the static." 2024. Directed by Umesh Bist
The static surged, rising to a high-pitched whine. Vikrant looked at the clock.
11:09:55. 11:09:56.
"Shailesh, wait! How do I catch him? The evidence in 2024 is gone!"
The voice was fading. "It’s not gone. It’s in the pack. The forensic reports in the back pocket... they were misfiled in '99. They prove the blood type. Go!"
11:10:00.
Silence. The amber light on the radio died. The connection was severed.
Vikrant stood in the quiet office, the hum of the refrigerator the only sound. He looked down at the "Gyaarah Gyaarah Season 1 Complete Pack." It was more than a cold case file; it was a lifeline thrown across the river of time.
He reached into the back pocket of the binder and pulled out a crinkled, plastic evidence bag. Inside was a handkerchief, stained dark brown. A piece of evidence that had been lost for twenty-five years, preserved in Shailesh’s pack.
Vikrant grabbed his coat and his gun. He tucked the journals under his arm. He wasn’t just a cop with a cold case anymore. He was the partner of a ghost. The 11th hour had passed, but the investigation had finally begun.
1. Complete Episode List (assumed 8 episodes)
- Episode 1 — "Shuruaat" — Introduction of protagonist, inciting incident.
- Episode 2 — "Rishte" — Worldbuilding, supporting characters, first reveal.
- Episode 3 — "Jung" — Rising conflict; protagonist faces setback.
- Episode 4 — "Mod" — Mid-season turning point; secrets exposed.
- Episode 5 — "Aagaz" — Stakes escalate; antagonist’s plan advances.
- Episode 6 — "Manthan" — Characters confront inner conflicts; subplot resolves.
- Episode 7 — "Tannav" — Penultimate tensions, cliffhanger setup.
- Episode 8 — "Nishkarsh" — Season finale: resolution and setup for next season.
Purnendu Bhattacharya as DK (The Antagonist)
Without revealing too much, the serial killer’s identity is a masterstroke. Bhattacharya plays a character so charming yet chilling that you will want to go back to Episode 1 the moment you finish Episode 10 to see the clues you missed.
Behind the Scenes: The Walkie-Talkie Magic
One of the unique selling points of the complete pack is the bonus content explaining the "two-director" approach. Director Umesh Bist shot the 1990s sequences entirely on film grain cameras (Arri Alexa with vintage lenses) and the 2020s sequences on digital 4K. The color grading changes based on who is holding the walkie-talkie—warm sepia for Viren, cold blue for Shaurya. When they talk to each other, the screen splits with two different color tones. This visual detail is lost in low-resolution streams but shines in the complete pack's 4K version.