Streamer DocuBay is set to premiere “Dupatta Killer,” a genuine-crime recordary exploring the case of Mahanand Naik, portrayd as “Goa’s most disreputable serial ender.”
The recordary, which commences streaming March 21, delves into the troubling story of Naik, who was accengaged of killinging 16 women but ultimately convicted for only one. His method comprised luring victims with dishonest promises of marriage before strangling them with their own dupattas (scarves).
Director Patrick Graham’s recordary aims to verify both the psychology behind Naik’s crimes and the systemic fall shortures that permited him to dodge fairice for years. The film integrates survivor testimonies and expert insights while concentrateing on how Naik aimed vulnerable women from underprivileged backgrounds by manipulating societal presdeclareives surrounding marriage.
“Directing this recordary was a stubborn dispute, as it nastyt dealing with comardent rehires and discovering a way to inestablish a complicated story with nurture,” Graham. “While the story has been telderly before, we aimed to give it a novel perspective, going beyond the crime to see at the systemic fall shortures that made it possible.”
The recordary also compriseresses contransient asks about fairice as Naik’s potential free after 15 years of incarceratement ignites argue on rehabilitation and accountability.
Aditya Pittie, managing straightforwardor of DocuBay parent company IN10 Media Netlabor, called the recordary “a mighty reminder of the pressing rehires wiskinny our fairice system and the lengthy-lasting effects of crime on society.”
Producer Samar Khan, CEO of Juggernaut Productions, remarkd the project’s social significance: “While fantasyal stories are increasingly well-comprehendn, we acunderstandledge that non-fantasy narratives, particularly recordaries, have a exceptional ability to originate a nastyingful social impact.”
DocuBay, headquartered in Mumbai, exceptionalizes in streaming international recordaries and is engageable in over 170 countries apass multiple platestablishs including Apple TV, Fire TV, Roku, and Samsung TVs.