As darkness descended over Kolkata on September 5th, an eager crowd had gathered in front of Priya Cinema. Late director Rituparno Ghosh's last directorial venture was finally revealed itself to audiences in a special screening at one of the most famed cinema halls in the city. The crème of the Bengali film industry along with fans alike missed the presence of the director himself but were eager and excited to catch the premiere. The film opens with Maharaja Arunagshu, the ruler of Balwantpur discovering about his son Himangshu's romances abroad and writing down a will that prevented Himangshu from inheriting the position of Maharaja if he marries a non-Hindu girl. Enter the sleuth Byomkesh Bakshi, a role expertly adapted by Kahaani director Sujoy Ghosh. He is on a train heading to Balwantpur with his author friend Ajit (Anindya Chatterjee), on an invitation for hunting by Maharaja Himangshu himself. However the mystery thickens when Himangshu reveals to Byomkesh about the disappearance of Harinath, the palace librarian, and how the queen was devastated at the ill event. Byomkesh, known for his brilliance and zeal to seek the truth starts investigating the mysterious disappearance, while Ajit finds out about the loneliness of queen Alaka and that her only friend in the palace was Harinath, for whose disappearance she blamed her husband. Maharaja Himangshu, in a desperate attempt to win back his wife's trust, threatens Byomkesh at point blank range. But Byomkesh, being the truth seeker that he is, solves the mystery of the palace and Balwantpur and finally, the royal physician Kaligati (Sibaji Bandyopadhay) turns out to be the culprit. Rituparno Ghosh's Satyanweshi does justice to Sharadindu Bandyopadhyay's Chorabali, on which the film is based. Sujoy Ghosh fit perfectly in the role of the sleuth Byomkesh Bakshi and Sibaji Bandyopadhyay portrayed the double faced villain Kaligati brilliantly. The rest of the cast too performed their best, which includes Anindya Chatterjee as Ajit, Arpita Chatterjee as Rani Alaka and Indraneil Mukherjee as Maharaja Himangshu. The biggest leverage, however, is the music. Debajyoti Mishra's soothing rendition of Rabindranath Tagore's Shukhohin Nishidin, Rituparno Ghosh's Taradim Taradim and Kalidasa's Meghdutam clearly becomes the icing on the cake. Matching the sounds of the era of the maharajas, the only 3 songs are placed articulately, to go with the flow of the low paced thriller. Overall, Satyanweshi pays tribute to the writer Sharadindu Bandopadhyay as well as the director whose vision crafted the film. A must watch for every Rituparno Ghosh fan, as his last directorial venture does not cease to impress.