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Amazon’s MX Player’s Sixer Season 2 Hits The Ball Out Of The Field

Sixer

Rating: *** ½

To  be able to  fully submerge ourselves in the  five episodes  of  Sixers’s second season,we must  be prepared  to see  cricket being stripped  off all its glamour. This is no Lagaan. Sixer takes us back to the grassroots of cricket, where  the struggle  for  young cricketers  begins. It also ends  at the regional  level. So there is no  grand  finale  , no World Cup only cups of  tea for the  anxious players.

  It takes time for us to  get into the  world created by  writers Arunabh Kumar, Shivankit Singh Parihar(who also plays one of  the leads) ,Harish Peddinti,Shreyansh Pandey and  Vishwas Sharma, more so  since the sequel  comes three years  after the first season.

 I  suggest those  who haven’t seen  the  first season do so before  getting into Season 2.

 The provincial  wasteland remains  just the way it is. Arid and  unproductive: this no country for the  movers  and shakers. Co-directors Chaitanya Kumbhakonum and Divyanshu Malhotra maintain a continuity  in  the storytelling  which is  rare in sports serials where everything  moves according to the  momentum suited to the game.

The ambience in Sixer is constructed  quietly  without fuss or  self congratulation .The  absence of “glamour” as  defined  by  our cinema is the  USP of the series, although  viewers fed on  glamorized  versions  of life  on the  OTT, may  find the  naturalism  to be  a damper .

The series  , like much of the  very admirable production company TVF’s output, portrays the struggles  of the young aspirants  at the grassroot level, without  pulling punches .

 It is  significant that  the protagonists  Nikku(Shivankrit Singh Parihar) and Shanu(Gaurav Singh) are seen more off the field than on it. This is  not a series  tapping into the “thrills” of the  game. The grime  and grit behind the scenes occupies  the forefront,defiantly and without apology.

In  my favourite episode 3 Nikku  and Shanu, fiercely competitive  until that point,  come close when they  visit the latter’s  village . In a quiet  moment  of  interaction  Shanu tells his background story  to Nikku.The  sense of  belonging in a world where the players are  never  inured  to  a  higher  ground, but  connected by their shared  modest dreams, buoys  the  series. You may not  find heart throbs  in Sixer. But the  heartbeat of  the  real workingclass  India is palpable .

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