Paatal Lok Review: Jaideep Ahlawat, phenomenally good, contributes a large share of the heft. Neeraj Kabi opts as always for pitch-perfect modulation. Swastika Mukherjee is absolutely terrific.

Paatal Lok Review: Jaideep
Ahlawat in a still from the series. (Image courtesy: kans26)
Cast:
Jaideep Ahlawat, Neeraj Kabi, Ishwak Singh, Gul Panag, Jagjeet Sandhu, Swastika
Mukherjee, Vipin Sharma
Director:
Avinash Arun Dhaware, Prosit Roy
Rating: 4
stars (out of 5)
The
key pieces are laid out upfront. They are familiar. The neo-noir crime drama -
it dredges its way into the dregs of a netherworld - is peopled by smarmy
politicians, shifty cops, deadbeat contract killers, a wily primetime news
presenter dodging big and small conspiracies, and a pair of East Delhi
policemen negotiating a maze. Add to that the fact that Paatal
Lok, Amazon Prime's new show, is peppered with cuss words and you have what
might seem like a conventional underworld saga.
Hang
on. Not for a moment does the nine-episode Paatal Lok feel fusty. Its
social and political context, fully integrated into the narrative instead of
being employed as mundane backdrop, enhances its relevance as a story. The
immersive tale adds up to a compelling, convincing portrait of a world going to
seed.
It
moves back and forth between Delhi's putrid periphery to the city's puffy power
centres, and between the urban sprawl of the national capital to hinterland
towns and villages, to probe the rot that's gnawing at the vitals of a society.
The mythic and the starkly real are juxtaposed to narrate a story in which Evil
battles Greater Evil with slim chances of victory.
The Paatal
Lok denizens, be they well-meaning individuals, crafty operators,
hapless down-and-outs or epitomes of utter evil, have pasts they cannot live
down. Their back stories aren't trotted out to explain away unacceptable
behaviour. They constitute social commentary on themes ranging from
majoritarian bigotry and caste oppression to media machinations and political
corruption.
The
first time the state of the country is alluded to, it is in the form of a
statement. In the first of nine episodes, a morally ambivalent news anchor
Sanjeev Mehra (Neeraj Kabi) says: "People like us used to be heroes.
Something about this country changed. Now we get trolled, killed, fired!"
When the despair is expressed the next time, a couple of episodes later, it
assumes a more ominous edge. A colleague says to Sanjeev, "This country is
going to the dogs. We're all disposable like Gauri Lankesh."
The
mauling of the media, both from within and without, is only one side of the
unsettling picture that Paatal Lok paints, a picture in which anybody's story
could end badly. If you are a Muslim, you could end up dead on a railway
station platform, lynched by cow vigilantes. If you are a Dalit boy in a
village, you could end up being a sitting duck for upper-caste bullies. And if
you are a woman trapped in a man's body, you are doomed to end up under a heap
of indignities.
In Paatal
Lok, the police force and the nation's central investigating agencies, too,
are putty in the hands of the powers that be. Nobody less so than two policemen
posted in the Outer Jamuna Paar police station - Inspector Hathiram Chaudhary
(Jaideep Ahlawat) and rookie cop Imran Ansari (Ishwak Singh).
The
former not only has a lot to prove to himself and his wife Renu (Gul Panag), he
is also unable to rein in his rebellious school-going son Siddharth
(Bodhisattva Sharma), a fish out of water in an English medium school. Ansari,
on his part, is at the receiving end of gratuitous, condescending advice from
colleagues as well as others on account of his religious identity.
Two
characters who have nothing in common, socially or morally, share an unlikely
trait in Paatal
Lok- of love for strays. One is Dolly (Swastika Mukherjee), the emotionally
vulnerable, anxiety-ridden wife of Sanjeev Mehra; the other is Vishal
"Hathoda" Tyagi (Abhishek Banerjee), a ruthless hitman with 45
murders to his name. They never meet, but their fondness for canines becomes a
crucial link between one end of the spectrum to the other in a world that, as
the policeman-protagonist asserts in the opening scene of Episode One, is
inhabited by insects. Nobody cares what happens to them.
A
world-weary beat cop, Hathiram has languished in the middle rungs of the force
forever. The man in uniform is merely going through the motions when an
unexpected opportunity to finally prove his worth to his superiors presents
itself.
A plot to kill Sanjeev Mehra is busted by men from the Delhi Police
headquarters led by DCP Bhagat (Vipin Sharma). Four suspects are nabbed before
they can strike. Hathiram is assigned the case. He grabs the chance with both
hands. But the guy is no super cop. The tenacious old workhorse, in his
enthusiasm to get the job done, makes mistakes.
Hathiram
receives constant support from Ansari, who has his sights set on being an IPS
officer and spares no effort to prepare himself for the Indian Administrative
Services interview. But the disillusioned inspector is perpetually at odds with
SHO Virk (Anurag Arora), a man who once trained under him and is now his boss.
Circumstances,
both extenuating and aggravating, play a key role in the lives of the key
characters. These individuals who stand on two opposing sides of the moral
divide are unpredictable in their responses to both crises and lucky breaks.
Sanjeev Mehra is a liberal who knows the limitations of being one. He isn't
averse to letting facts be twisted to his advantage and schmoozing with men of
questionable antecedents. Conversely, even the cold-blooded Vishal Tyagi, who
kills his victims with hammer blows, is capable of kindness.
In
this world, the wealthy and powerful have no qualms in manipulating the less
privileged to protect their turf. Sanjeev has to do a balancing act to keep his
job; his wife, trapped in a loveless, listless marriage, seeks solace in
tending to a pregnant mongrel; and his understudy Sara Matthews (Niharika Lyra
Dutt) strays into a fling with him only to end up disillusioned.
The
women in Paatal
Lok, especially the two in the journalist's life, do not get the play they
deserve. This is a man's world. But Dolly and Sara, one warding off panic
attacks, the other desperate not to lose her soul, hold their grounds as the
world around them appears to spin out of control. The former turns out to be a
saviour, if only unintentionally; the latter emerges as a voice of conscience.
Despite
its many detours, Paatal
Lok, directed by Avinash Arun Dhaware (Killa) and Prosit Roy (Pari), never
loses momentum. It is evenly paced, steers clear of predictable genre tropes,
and delivers its big reveals in an easy-flowing, unshowy manner, a rare
attribute for a cops-and-criminals saga.
Ahlawat,
phenomenally good, contributes a large share of the heft that Paatal
Lok achieves. His is a performance that should rank alongside the best
we have seen in an Indian original series. Kabi, opting as always for
pitch-perfect modulation, fleshes out the captivating ambiguities of the
character with minimum visible effort. Swastika Mukherjee is absolutely
terrific. Playing a bruised woman struggling to hold herself together, she does
not let a single false note creep into the portrayal.
The
supporting cast - notably Ishwak Singh, Vipin Sharma, Niharika Lyra Dutt and,
not the least, Abhishek Banerjee, who demonstrates that you do not have to
yelp, growl and scowl to play a psychopath - is unwaveringly right on the
money.
The
treatment, texture and sweep lend Paatal Lok, produced by Anushka
Sharma and created by Sudip Sharma (writer of NH10, Udta Punjab and
Sonchiriya), striking depth of detailing even when it treads known terrain.
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