All Recent Reviews of
Citadel: Honey Bunny
Reviewers on this page:
Sonal Pandya
Sanyukta Thakare
Uday Bhatia
Tatsam Mukherjee
Srivathsan Nadadhur
Saibal Chatterjee
Shomini Sen
Shubhra Gupta
Rahul Desai
Priyanka Roy
Citadel: Honey Bunny
Sonal Pandya
Times Now, Zoom
Varun Dhawan, Samantha's Prequel Spy Saga Packs A Solid Punch
Helmed by director duo Raj and DK, the Indian instalment of the Citadel franchise finds its legs with a strong ending.
Citadel: Honey Bunny is the third series in the Citadel universe. Arriving on the heels of the Italian series Citadel: Diana, the Indian version is a prequel story that links into the main Amazon Prime Video series. Developed by Sita Menon and directed by Raj Nidimoru and Krishna DK (Raj & DK), Citadel: Honey Bunny has a sluggish start introducing the characters and the Indian connection. However, over six episodes, the series builds on the characters’ connections for a solid finish.
Citadel: Honey Bunny
Sanyukta Thakare
Mashable India
Varun Dhawan- Samantha Ruth Prabhu Show Makes Priyanka Chopra’s Series Even Better
Kay Kay Menon has the biggest impact
The show fits right into the style of Raj and DK sans the comedy, the rawness and the drama will keep you hooked for a while. Set in the 90s and early 2000s it focuses on the lack of technology and old-school espionage. Its sequences set in the 90s will remind audiences of old movies like the action remains grounded to today’s time. The makers find a good mix of old aesthetics, cinematography and modern writing for spy thrillers. The show has ups and downs, but performances like that of Kay Kay Menon will bring you back to the story.
Citadel: Honey Bunny
Uday Bhatia
Mint Lounge
The dulling of Raj & DK
The Indian spin-off of ‘Citadel’, starring Samantha Ruth Prabhu and Varun Dhawan, is a lacklustre affair, with show-runners Raj & DK missing their usual spark
Sometimes you get what you want, but it’s not what you need. Since 2018, Raj & DK have been on a creative streak. It began with Stree, a horror-comedy sleeper hit they wrote and produced. The following year, their first series, The Family Man, premiered on Amazon Prime; they show-ran and co-directed it over two seasons (a third is in the works). This was followed by two more shows, Farzi (on Amazon)—my favourite of their long-form work—and Guns & Gulaabs (on Netflix). With each success, the possibility that Hollywood would come calling seemed likelier.
Citadel: Honey Bunny
Tatsam Mukherjee
The Wire
A Lifeless Spy Franchise Prevails Over Filmmaker Duo Raj & DK
The Amazon Prime series is arguably the safest and weakest project Raj & DK have taken part in.
The choices in Citadel: Honey Bunny sing less frequently compared to other undertakings of the Raj & DK filmmaker duo. An offshoot of Amazon Prime’s gazillion-dollar spy franchise pitted against the silliness of James Bond, Jason Bourne, Ethan Hunt, etc., Raj & DK’s latest carries the baggage of an over-embellished universe tensely fitted into a studio-approved runtime. Like its American counterpart helmed by the Russo brothers, even the Indian version spans six episodes with a duration of 40-50 minutes each.
Citadel: Honey Bunny
Srivathsan Nadadhur
(for M9 News)
Independent Film Critic
Raj-DK’s Average Action Thriller
In the early 90s, a stuntman Bunny brings an aspirant actress Honey on board for a side gig, only to be sucked into a world of high-stakes action, espionage and betrayal.
Many years later, Bunny and Honey have a daughter – Nadia – but are no longer together. However, they must look beyond their differences to guard their daughter against rival forces. What connects them to Vishwa, Citadel and an Armada? Performances There’s little to complain about the performances from the star-studded lineup. Samantha, continuing from where she left off in The Family Man, packs a punch with the action sequences and showcases restraint while handling Honey’s conflicting situations and emotions. She has the right style and body language to be an action star and makes the most of the opportunity.
Citadel: Honey Bunny
Saibal Chatterjee
NDTV
The Series Misses The Bull's Eye By Miles
The series does not exactly go down in flames but neither does it have us holding our breath as its action set pieces explode on screen.
It hits the ground running all right but the mission of sustaining the momentum is an abject failure. Much of what Citadel: Honey Bunny attempts to do proves way too much for a script that, even at its best, can only laboriously inch its way forward - and backwards. Citadel: Honey Bunny is an Indian spinoff of Amazon Prime Video’s Citadel Spyverse that was birthed last year in an espionage thriller series fronted by Priyanka Chopra and Richard Madden and executive produced by the Russo brothers. While it has its share of action, it runs low on intrigue and suspense.
Citadel: Honey Bunny
Shomini Sen
Wion
Varun Dhawan, Samantha Ruth Prabhu pack a punch or two in a middling series
Honey Bunny isnt Raj & DKs best work but it isnt the worst either. It gloriously presents Samantha and the actress delivers her part well. The thriller is inconsistent with its storytelling but still better than the terribly boring original serie
Is there something called an overdose of spyverse? If there is, I am one of the first victims of it. Too many spyverses are in play in pop culture and quite honestly none offer anything new. In Prime Video’s latest series Citadel: Honey Bunny – an Indian prequel to Russo Brothers’ Citadel featuring Priyanka Chopra – the action sequences are in plenty and almost relentless yet seem repetitive. Raj & DK have spoiled us with The Family Man, a sharp series where wit and action were quick on their heels. In Citadel: Honey Bunny – the lead pair Samantha Ruth Prabhu and Varun Dhawan give their all to the action sequences and perform some awe-inspiring stunts, yet the series lacks the thrills. Mostly.
Citadel: Honey Bunny
Shubhra Gupta
The Indian Express
Samantha Ruth Prabhu explodes off the screen in Raj and DK’s clunky series
So, where does that leave Varun Dhawan? Why, readying for his Terminator avatar, which looks as if it is going to kick-start the next season. But in this one, it is Samantha Ruth Prabhu all the way.
First things first: all hail the arrival of Samantha Ruth Prabhu, Indian cinema’s first real female action star who demands our attention from the get-go and never loses it through the six part series, Citadel: Honey Bunny. She’s coiled, ready for action, exploding off the screen whenever the script demands it of her, and the demand stays consistently high. As the family woman-cum-spry spy, who will do anything to protect her daughter, Samantha’s Honey is the best part of this enterprise, directed and written by Raj and DK (Sita Menon also gets writing and directing credit), and executive produced by the Russo Bros.
Citadel: Honey Bunny
Rahul Desai
The Hollywood Reporter India
Will The Real Raj & DK Please Stand Up?
The Indian spy drama is shackled by the Hollywood franchise it expands
Citadel: Honey Bunny is a catchy title. In fact, you can almost hear it. “Honey Bunny” instantly evokes the viral Idea Cellular ad jingle from 2012: you’re my pumpkin pumpkin/hello honey bunny. But there’s more to the earworm than a Pulp Fiction tribute or a term of endearment. The commercial itself showed a traveler infecting different parts of the country with a tune; the cutesy lyrics, too, felt like the collective sound of couples staying connected across regions. It’s not a stretch to suggest that Citadel: Honey Bunny — whose pan-world premise features a pan-Indian adventure of a couple named Honey (Samantha Ruth Prabhu) and Bunny (Varun Dhawan) — is a long-form descendent of the jingle. It’s totally on brand for director duo Raj & DK, who thrive on affectionate pop-cultural nods, cinephilia and retro references.
Citadel: Honey Bunny
Priyanka Roy
The Telegraph
Citadel: Honey Bunny - Fails to soar.
A man, holding a gun, chases a woman through the nooks and crannies of Belgrade. Finding himself in a cul-de-sac of sorts, he sees her pointing a gun back at him. “Put your gun down,” she barks at him. He, a seasoned special agent, lets go of his gun and promptly gets shot. The law of probability points to the fact that if he had held on to the gun, there would be a 50 per cent chance of him being shot and a 50 per cent chance of him being able to shoot the woman in front of him. When he drops the gun, for no explainable reason, he makes that probability convert to a 100 per cent chance against him.