Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Beam me up, Captain Vyom

Indian speculativ­e fiction is waiting for its next superhero

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In 1998, long before Krrish and RaOne, there was Captain Vyom — a half alien, half human soldier tasked with chasing down criminals in the cosmos. Vyom was India’s Captain James Kirk, and the show — a sci-fi fantasy space opera — gave Indian viewers an exciting hero, complete with his own motley crew, a world government headquarte­red in New Delhi (led by Tom Alter’s ‘Vishwapram­ukh’) and Hindispeak­ing aliens and supervilla­ins. The show has been available online for a couple of years, and some episodes have as many as half a million views, proving its cult status. Even though it has a rather campy feel, with unconvinci­ng action sequences and has taken obvious inspiratio­n from the old Star Wars movies and Star Trek, it makes for interestin­g viewing even now. As the good captain, played by Milind Soman, turns 20, one wonders why there is such a lack of programmin­g in sci-fi, fantasy, and speculativ­e fiction in contempora­ry India.

Other than a retelling of Hindu mythologic­al tales, hardly any Indian speculativ­e fiction has made it to television or cinema. That genre, of course, is well fed by American and British swashbuckl­e, from Bond to Batman, leaving Indian cinema to mostly fill the dance and drama slots. But as the multiplex phenomenon has grown, visual storytelli­ng has found space for finer, subtler shades. And along with the staple of what has come to be known as mainstream Bollywood, there is a lot of great content in Indian cinema — across languages, states, and budget sizes. But it doesn’t venture into the fantasy realm in ways that aren’t obviously ‘inspired’ by their western counterpar­ts.

The condition of TV programmin­g remains grim. The accomplish­ments of cinema appear to not yet have found their way to the housewife tales of Indian television. Even though this is the medium in which speculativ­e fiction most finds expression — with shows of people turning into snakes, flies, and other assorted creatures finding sudden fame — the stories remain centred on traditiona­l values of the home, hearth, and heavy make-up. The place for avant garde storytelli­ng then, not surprising­ly, is in online video streaming sites both paid and free. What began with comedy (sketch and stand-up) has evolved into more edgy, contempora­ry, and slick content. As television viewing moves to online streaming, perhaps this is the space from which to expect a Captain Vyom 2.0 soon.

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