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Ajay Rai’s Kankhajura Is Anchored  By An Exceptional Performance By Roshan Mathew

Kankhajura(SonyLIV)

Kankhajura(SonyLIV)

Rating: *** ½

If Kankhajura’s  dark sinister criminal mood  flows by like  a breeze in spite of  eight  episodes, it is  for Roshan Mathew, that  chameleon-like  Malayalam actor(have you seen his work in his native tongue, if not then  about-time you did) who transforms in front of our  incredulous eyes into a severely traumatized  borderline-psychotic, kind gentle naïve  yet devious  man named Ashu who  seeks only one  thing in life: validation  from  his brother Max, played  effectively by Mohit Raina.

Very rarely are we forced to wonder what  a film/series would be  like without an  actor: Dilip Kumar in Devdas, Shabana Azmi in Arth, Kamal Haasan in Hey Ram

Add Roshan Mathew to this rarefied roster.  Were  it not for Roshan, Kankhajura would  collapse like a  house of ‘cads’ and I  do means cads. The characters including Mathew and Raina,  have a mean streak running through their lacerated souls.Max’s business buddies played by the redoubtable Ninad Kamath  and Mahesh Krishna  Shetty are  various degrees of  nasty depending on which way the wind blows.The latter even takes a leak on a victim’s face. Not  a  nice man  to know.

Even the women aren’t  immune from a smattering of spite.Veteran Usha Nadkarni  has  a  whole   lot of fun with her  role, reminiscent of  Shabana Azmi in the recent Dabba Cartel,  as a  dreaded  crimelord  .

Heeba Shah is  a whole lot of  steely will  as  a hardnosed  cop  who seems to nurture Ashu’s slowburn intensity , but she  too has her own  agenda.Even  Max’s genteel wife(Sara Jane Dias) secretes  some not so pleasant surprises for  her male counterpoints.

Taking  hold  of  the core of the  original characters  from the Israeli series Magpie, director Chandan  Arora  and his co-writer Upendra Sidhaye construct a curious kingdom of  whitecollar crime, governed  by surreptitious self-gratification.

There is  an unusual level of  layering and subtexts  on the  storytelling, easy to miss  on a medium as casual as the OTT.So if you are  one of those  viewers who  saunter in and out, this series might be  problematic.

As mentioned even before, the actors iron out the  rough edges; the series retains the  basic  emotional  core of  two brothers , polarized and traumatized  by  their individual  circumstances to the point of  becoming adversaries.

Interestingly Roshan Mathew and Mohita Raina  play off each  other with a sense  of guilelessness , as though they don’t know were the  sibling relationship is  heading.There is a  feeling  of relentless dread cutting through the plot.

That the  series is located in  Goa  is a happy coincidence: the palm trees, beaches, the  ancient  heritage homes and quaint cottages lend  an alluring mystery  , far deeper than what the characters collectively convey.

Ideally, Kankhajura should have found its home on the  big screen where the articulate frames would  have whispered  about the mysteries that we can  only imagine on the home  medium.

Kankhajura has its  dosage of  deficits. Some of the action in the  closing episodes looks stagey and  tacky, and one involving  gas cylinders is an  embarrassment. But with  Roshan Mathew’s  OTT-defining  performance—yes, we have not seen anything like this on any streamer–the series holds together very ably. As far as slowburn crime dramas go, this one  scorches.

 

 

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