Welcome to the hormonal revolution

For all its optical affluence and love for the lush, Made In Heaven tells us there is more to the working class than meets the eye.

Update: 2019-03-09 21:06 GMT
A still from Made in Heaven

In one of the most path-breaking scenes in this   nine-episode entertainer, the protagonist Shobita Dhulipala and her screen-husband Jim Sarbh make love with their hands legs and tongue all over the screen. This lack  of inhibition on the wen is most refreshing. Bring it on.

Say hello to this bracing antidote to repression. Every  major character in Made In Heaven is waiting to break free from one form of repression or another. Shobita’s character Tara comes from a humble  middleclass background, has married into money and now ‘Money’ is cheating on her with her best friend. You can’t have your diamonds without sleepless nights.

Sleepless nights, reminds me  of Arjun Mathur’s character Karan Mehra who is a closeted  homosexual yearning to come  out, grappling with emotional and financial problems. Together these two very fine actors, Arjun and Shobhita, plot and plan through a string of affluent weddings, lavish on  both food and feud, fuelled by desire and desperation and a longing to find a more relevant core in their plush lifestyle than what is affordable to the  senses.

Some of these characters are wretchedly unhappy. I mean,  how successful can a marriage  be when the wife-to-be sleeps  with a Bollywood superstar (wishful casting of Pulkit Samrat) who is invited to perform at her wedding? Or a  tycoon’s sole male heir (the  underused Pavail Gulati from  the mini-series Yudh) who tells his parents that his wife is no goldigger and that the child she aborted in the past was his, when it was not!

Lies seem to fuel the passions  of these inflamed characters. A simmer discontent underlines  the well laid-out drama, like a still blue pool that whirls and swirls underneath. Accordingly the truthful  moments shine brightly in the series. There is this epiphanous encounter between our hero Karan and his snoopy landlord’s zany daughter (Yashaswini Dayama — wish there was more of her in the series) when he catches her smoking and reprimands  her, and she tells him he shouldn’t stay out all night. They both know each other’s guilty secrets and are comfortable in their knowledge.

The writing (Reema Kagti, Zoya Akhtar, Niranjan Iyenger, Alankrita Shrivastava, Vivek Anchalia) is fluent and feisty. The dialogues hit the right notes without putting too fine  a point on it. While the surfaces  glisten with gloss, this is not a series that wallows in superficial glamour. Not by half. Issues on societal hypocrisy (Arjun runs into a lover all set to marry an unsuspecting bride who when confronted hits back with, ‘will you marry me?’) run through the series creating a tingling spine of revelations on topics that cinema refrains  from exploring.

The performances range from outstanding to satisfactory, and the quality doesn’t depend on  the length of the character’s role. Shivani Raghuvanshi has less playing time than the other protagonists. But she nails it as a small-towner Jazz (real name Jaspreet) revelling in the life of  the rich and the privileged. Though a brunt of sniggers, it is Jazz who often comes up with solutions in deadlocked weddings.

For all its optical affluence and love for the lush, Made In  Heaven tells us there is more to the working class than meets the eye.

Made In  Heaven (Amazon Prime)
Starring Arjun Mathur,  Shobhita Dhulipala, Kalki Koechlin,  Jim Sarbh, ShashankArora , Shivani Raghuvanshi
Directed  by Nitya  Mehra, Zoya Akhtar, Prashant Nair, Alankrita Shrivastava
Rating: ****(4 stars)

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