The Sunday Guardian

Despite hiccups, ‘Paatal Lok’ is the best web-series in a long time

- MURTAZA ALI KHAN

Amazon Prime Video’s latest offering Pataal Lok is marked by constant tonal changes. The nine-episode series starts off as a police procedural cum investigat­ive thriller but then it takes noirish shades before transformi­ng into a family drama only to take noirish shades once again. Created by Sudip Sharma, the writer of films like NH10, Udta Punjab and Sonchiriya, Pataal Lok stars Jaideep Ahlawat, Neeraj Kabi, Ishwak Singh, Niharika Lyra Dutt, Abhishek Banerjee, Jagjeet Sandhu, Swastika Mukherjee, Asif Khan, Anindita Bose and Gul Panag in key roles. The series is co-directed by Avinash Arun and Prosit Roy and is produced under the banner of Anushka Sharma’s Clean Slate Films.

While the series is essentiall­y a blend of different genres, it is during its noir parts that the series is at its most exhilarati­ng. As a matter of fact, Paatal Lok is likely to remind film noir fans of Navdeep Singh’s 2007 neo-noir film Manorama Six Feet Under which was loosely based on Roman Polanski’s 1974 Hollywood classic Chinatown. A lot of the people who have watched both Manorama Six Feet Under and Chinatown feel that the former is good enough to stand on its own as an independen­t film. That’s how good a film Manorama is.

Now, at first when one starts to notice the tonal similariti­es between Pataal Lok and Manorama one thinks of it as a mere coincidenc­e. The reality, however, is that Navdeep Singh has served as the script consultant on Paatal Lok. While there is no denying that the series belongs to Sharma, Singh’s contributi­on just cannot be overlooked. The unrelentin­g mood that stylistica­lly oozes out of each and every frame during the parts of the series set in Chitrakoot certainly bears Singh’s signature. Not to mention the lingering presence of signature noirish elements such as prying bystanders, cheating husbands, femme fatales, duplicitou­s cops, and morally ambiguous heroes in Pataal Lok’s treacherou­s world.

Paatal Lok’s labyrinthi­ne storyline is replete with all kinds of subplots. But the screenplay employs a rather unique nonlinear storytelli­ng approach that seamlessly ties up various secondary subplots to the central narrative. Each new episode begins with a flashback of sorts involving totally new characters which at first doesn’t make much sense but gradually things begin to fall in place. The series is loaded with strong socio-political commentary that makes highly relevant observatio­ns about the times we live in. But it does so subtly without ever being preachy.

Paatal Lok has two very solid performanc­es around which everything else revolves. On one hand we have a washed-out cop named Hathiram Chaudhary (essayed by Ahlawat), on the other we have Sanjeev Mehra (Kabi), a firebrand news anchor constantly at loggerhead­s with those in positions of power. Both the actors are brilliant in their respective roles and are ably supported by the rest of the cast. While Kabi’s is a truly internatio­nal performanc­e and he never really misses a note, Ahlawat’s performanc­e during which he goes through an entire gamut of emotions can best be described as raw and gritty. Barring a few hiccups, Paatal Lok is easily the best show to have come out of the Indian web space in a long time.

KAMINI VIDISHA, cofounder of Acadru, an online learning platforms that offers multi-disciplina­ry modules, practical experience­s, in a conversati­on with

Q. Please tell us about the ideology of Acadru.com. And how was it conceptual­ised?

A. In today’s world on an average, we pivot our careers 6-7 times in our life. We have to learn, unlearn and re-learn and focus on multi-disciplina­ry education to thrive in such a job-environmen­t. Thus, Acadru was born, as labour of love for non-linear learning and a passion to remain forever curious. Acadru is a free idea-discovery platform, which gives access to multi-disciplina­ry online learning modules, on unique topics, to create a variety of careers aligned with the user’s passion and challenges of the future.

Q. Does Acadru work with the permutatio­n and combinatio­n of an Algorithm-based module? A. Right now, we are a mentor enabled platform. However, an analytics-based platform is in the works. Leveraging technology to assist a user to be able to determine what exploratio­n to focus on. Next is the objective of our tech platform. For as we get more learner preference data, we can thus recommend learners, with which content to consume and how. Q. You are an all-women team crew. Why so?

A. It was started by four of us in our second career innings. After having a life of doing a job and raising kids for decades, we were haunted by the thought of retirement and pension. It all seemed very bland and linear, with all mommy and school groups just conversing about assignment­s, and admissions to college. That’s when we decided to do something about this and started Acadru. We were motivated by the lack of a platform where students could be better prepared for future jobs.

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