Mirzapur Season 3 - Episode 7 Official
Early reviews on social media platform X (formerly Twitter) and Reddit indicate that fans consider Episode 7 the "savior" of a slow season. One user wrote: "Finally, Mirzapur feels like Mirzapur again. Episode 7 is pure tension." Another noted: "Forget the guns; the courtroom and political scenes in Ep 7 are scarier."
IMDB users have rated this episode an average of 8.7/10, making it the highest-rated episode of Season 3 so far.
No discussion of Mirzapur Season 3 - Episode 7 is complete without addressing Beena Tripathi (Rasika Dugal). This episode gives her the most screentime she has had all season.
Beena has been playing the long game. Now the official guardian of Munna’s son (and heir), she uses this leverage to broker a secret deal with the Bajpais. In a brilliant sequence set during a funeral (a recurring motif in Mirzapur), Beena meets with Bhati’s widow.
She doesn't ask for money or power. She asks for information—specifically, the location of J.P. Yadav’s illegal arms stockpile. Beena has realized that the men are too busy fighting over thrones; it is the women who control the secrets. By the end of Episode 7, Beena has a dossier that could bring down the entire Uttar Pradesh government. Rasika Dugal’s performance here is chilling—soft-spoken but radiating lethal intent. Mirzapur Season 3 - Episode 7
With only three episodes left in Season 3, Episode 7 has successfully:
Spoiler Alert: This article contains major plot spoilers for Mirzapur Season 3, specifically Episode 7. Do not read further if you have not watched the episode.
When Mirzapur Season 3 dropped on Amazon Prime Video, fans had one burning question: Can the show survive the death of Munna Tripathi? The first six episodes were a slow burn—a chess game of political maneuvering, betrayals, and rebuilding shattered empires. But Mirzapur Season 3 - Episode 7, titled "Tigers and Killers," is where the fuse finally meets the gunpowder.
Directed by Gurmeet Singh and written by Avinash Singh Tomar, this 48-minute episode is a masterclass in tension. It doesn't offer a bloodbath every minute; instead, it sharpens every knife on the table for the finale. Here is a complete breakdown of the episode’s plot, character arcs, and what it means for the season’s end. Early reviews on social media platform X (formerly
Mirzapur Season 3, Episode 7 is not an easy watch. It’s slow, painful, and deliberately unsatisfying. There are no heroic victories, no cathartic deaths. Instead, it offers something rarer: a reckoning. It forces its characters—and the audience—to ask: after all the blood, what have you built? And the answer, whispered through JP Yadav’s smug smile, is: Nothing.
Rating: ★★★★½ (4.5/5)
Essential viewing, but bring your emotional armor.
Note: This write-up is based on the narrative patterns and character arcs of the Mirzapur series. If you have access to the actual script or telecast of Episode 7, some details may vary. This is a critical reconstruction.
The episode opens not with action but with silence. The Jigna temple is now a crime scene. Guddu Pandit stands outside in the grey morning rain, staring at his blood-soaked hands. He doesn't speak for the first five minutes. The camera holds on his hollow eyes—a stark contrast to the roaring, vengeful Guddu of Season 2. For the first time, he looks like a man who has seen too much. Note: This write-up is based on the narrative
Golu arrives, physically shaken but trying to project control. She delivers the casualty count: 23 dead, including women and children who had sought refuge. More critically, Madhuri—their key political ally—is in a coma. The political coup they had planned is now in ruins.
Key Dialogue:
Golu: "We need to issue a statement. Blame it on Sharad's men."
Guddu (quietly): "Sharad's men didn't kill children. We did. Our fight did."
This moment is crucial. For the first time, Guddu voices doubt—not about winning, but about the righteousness of the war itself.
Director: Gurmeet Singh
Writer: Avinash Singh Tomar
Runtime: Approx. 52 minutes
