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'The Family Man': An 'Unputdownable' series

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The Family Man(Amazon Prime Video); Cast: Manoj Bajpai, Sharib Hashmi, Priyamani; Direction: Raj Nidimoru and Krishna DK; Rating: * * * and 1/2 (three and a half stars)


The idea of a dull white-collar office-goer moonlighting as an undercover agent is not new. Arnold Schwarzenegger did it in James Cameron's "True Lies" 25 years ago. Now it is Manoj Bajpai's turn in a 10-part series that is as irresistible as streetside gol gappas. I couldn't stop binging until it was all done.

The directorial duo of Raj and DK has a reputation of doing the unexpected, whether is India's first zombie film ("Go Goa Gone") or the gamechanging comic chudail film "Stree", which the duo wrote to super-success. In "The Family Man" they are on firmer ground. The material is strong and constantly interesting. Issues such as mob-lynching and anti-beef attacks or covert operations overreacting to terror threats, are raised organically in the plot as Srikant (Bajpai) grapples with home and terror (and sometimes terror at home) issues to the best of his abilities.

To be honest, Srikant's best is plainly inept. He lies to his pretty and smart (much more than he for sure) wife Suchitra (Priyamani) and yet somehow manages to get some respect from his two clever children ("If dad works so hard in his office, shouldn't we be rich by now?" asks the little boy) more for his ability to wriggle out of sticky situations than any parental virtuosity.

It's refreshing to meet a screen hero many sizes smaller than the larger-than-life heroes we've been watching all this year. Bajpai specialises in playing a cornered Everyman with a dark secret (even in Aligarh he played that). It's even more refreshing for the hero's friend played by the very talented Sharib Hashmi, to get some of the best lines.

Indeed the spoken lines are not just pithy and pungent they represent the colloquial cosmopolitanism and the cultural conundrum of Mumbai in striking yet subtle shades. There are some brilliant chase sequences on the streets of Mumbai shot with a keen eye for the crowds that disperse magically when trouble hits the roads.

Some of the non-pivotal characters such as the Kashmiri radical Qarim (played by a Kashmiri new actor Abrar Qazi) or the Malayali terrorist Moosa (Neeraj Madhav) wounded in ways that cannot be reified, are so memorable they tend to overshadow the main characters.

What I found unconvincing was the protagonist Srikant's wife Suchitra's friendship with her colleague (Sharad Kelkar). She exchanges what-ya-doing-miss-ya messages with her secret friend while her children sleep next to her, meets him on the sly, hides him from her husband. But when the husband follows her to a rendezvous he's made to look like a worm. Because, hold your breath, she hasn't slept with him.

Adultery is not just about the bed. It is also in the head. Luckily for us "A Family Man" has a wealth of well-written, deftly shot episodes that manage to merge the themes of working-class conflicts and terrorism seamlessly. If you like binge-watching, this one is for you. Like many of the characters in it, "The Family Man" leaves us viewers with no choice.