Anamika anand is a superstar in the spotlight, yet she juggles several tasks as a mother, wife, housekeeper, and actress, just like any other woman. On the surface, her picture-perfect family consists of her husband Nikhil (Sanjay Kapoor), daughter Amu (Muskkaan Jaferi), son Avinash (Lakshvir Singh Saran), and mother suhasini Muley.


The Fame Game is set in the ideal terrain by directors bejoy nambiar and Karishma Kohli. Sprawling mansions, bright vanity vans, flashy automobiles, and the media's never-ending glare The series, which spans six 45-minute episodes, explores various elements of Anamika's family and public life following her abrupt disappearance.



Sri Rao, Nambiar, and kohli then begin to dismantle this picture-perfect family that profits from glossy pages and viral content on the internet. As the detectives upend their home to discover Anamika, we get a dismal insight into the not-so-perfect lives of these individuals who struggle to communicate on a daily basis. As the storyline jumps back to six months ago, when superstar mukesh khanna (Manav Kaul) arrived into Anamika's life, all episodes of The Fame Game regularly bounce between the past and present. As the police inquiry drags on, the writers and directors uncover lies, deception, secrets, and terrible family ties that have rendered them powerless in the present.


The show goes around in circles without really getting somewhere. Anamika, as a mother and a superstar, does her best to fulfil her responsibilities. But he is well aware that it is never enough. Her disappearance opens a number of wounds, but it also leaves a lot unsaid and unresolved. Rajshri Deshpande, who plays investigating officer Shobha Trivedi, gives the show some much-needed life, but her character arc isn't completely satisfying. For a drama primarily based on the investigation into the disappearance of a superstar, The Fame Game's one whole episode does not touch with the development of the case.

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