Charitraheen -2018- Hoichoi Adult Web Series -s... May 2026

The success of Charitraheen rests heavily on its casting. Here is a breakdown of the key performances:

| Actor | Role | Performance Highlight | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Saheb Chatterjee | Satish | Saheb shed his romantic hero image to play a morally grey man. His portrayal of guilt and cowardice is painfully realistic. | | Sohini Sarkar | Sabitri | The show-stealer. Sohini’s Sabitri is not a villain but a survivor. She brings layers of pain, vengeance, and raw sexuality. | | Swastika Dutta | Kiran | Swastika delivers a powerful arc—from a loving fiancée to a woman shattered by betrayal, eventually rebuilding her self-respect. | | Kaushik Sen | The Family Patriarch | Kaushik Sen plays the hypocritical elder who preaches character but practices corruption. |

Critical Acclaim: Sohini Sarkar received multiple awards and nominations for her portrayal of Sabitri, often cited as one of the top 10 antagonist performances in Bengali OTT history.

Released as a Hoichoi Original, the Charitraheen web series transports the core conflicts of Sarat Chandra’s novel into a contemporary Bengali setting, while retaining the emotional and moral dilemmas. Charitraheen -2018- Hoichoi Adult Web Series -S...

The Central Storyline:

The series revolves around three principal characters:

The Plot Thickens: Satish, in a moment of weakness, succumbs to Sabitri’s advances. The secret affair becomes a tool for blackmail. As Satish tries to maintain his "character" in public, his private life disintegrates. Kiran discovers the betrayal, leading to a courtroom drama and a psychological breakdown where the term "characterless" is hurled at both men and women. The success of Charitraheen rests heavily on its casting

Unlike a typical family drama, the web series exposes the raw, gritty reality of infidelity, gaslighting, and sexual politics in a conservative Bengali household.

Directed by Sujit Mondal (known for Tobu Aporichito and Bolo Dugga Maiki), the series uses a muted color palette—greys, browns, and deep blues—to reflect the moral ambiguity.

By [Author Name]

In the landscape of Bengali digital entertainment, 2018 marked a significant turning point. While Hoichoi, the premier Bengali OTT platform, was building its library, one series stood out for its audacious title and even more audacious content: Charitraheen. Derived from a classic Bengali novel by the legendary Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay, the series posed a timeless question—What does it truly mean to be "without character" (Charitraheen)?

This article dives deep into the Charitraheen web series, exploring its plot, cast, thematic depth, critical reception, and why it remains a talking point for adult Bengali web series enthusiasts.


Before analyzing the 2018 web series, one must understand its source material. Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay wrote Charitraheen in 1917. Unlike his more romantic works (Devdas, Parineeta), Charitraheen was a scathing critique of feudal Bengal’s hypocrisy. The Plot Thickens: Satish, in a moment of

The novel follows Satish, a young man who falls in love with Kiranmayi (Kiran), only to be thwarted by a scheming woman named Sabitri. The title refers not to a single "fallen woman" but to the idea that in a corrupt society, everyone loses their character—the oppressed, the oppressor, and the silent bystanders.

Hoichoi’s adaptation needed to modernize this 100-year-old story for a 2018 audience accustomed to bold narratives on streaming platforms.