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Court Kacheri, A Pleasant Enriching Judicial Drama

Court Kacheri

Director Ruchir Arun’s 5-part  series Court Kacheri is the surprise  of the season. It is astutely  constructed and pleasantly  packaged . More especially,  almost  all the  performances have a warm lived-in feeling to them, as if  the  actors  are  not keen to ‘act’, just happy to be  the  characters  they have been assigned.

Rating: *** ½

   Unlike  other  legal dramas, the courtroom proceedings in  Court Kacheri are constantly  interesting. And  the judges especially the sarcastic female judge, played  by  theatre actress Tulika Banerjee,  who ticks off  a novice lawyer ,had me in splits. We don’t get to see much of her.But we get  a lot of  a brilliant theatre  actor from Allahabad S K  Batra as the  presiding  judge in  a divorce case which doesn’t quite  turn out the way we expect  it to.

Patriarchy gets  a neat kick in the pants.

 That is  the beauty of this  intelligently scripted  series. It leads us  gently into  a familiar  world and then turns the  characters in  a direction away from what we expect from  them. Unlike , say, Mamla Legal  Hai which constantly tried to  act smart, Court Kacheri’s tongue-in-cheekiness and throwaway quips  never seem laboured.

There is  a lady lawyer  named, believe  it or not, Kaghzat(played by Sumali Khaniwale) who keeps throwing substandard  shayari at  her colleagues over  glasses  of cold coffee.  She initially  seems  an add-on to the judicial proceedings. But  I  actually  missed   Kaghzat when  she exited  from the  plot.

At  the  core  Court Kacheri is  a father-son story of a family where the son is expected  to follow his father into the  legal profession—echoing Hrishikesh Mukherjee’s 1977 film Alaap--told with  considerable charm and affection. In Alaap Om Prakash  was  the disciplinarian  lawyer whose son Amitabh  Bachchan  doesn’t  wish to follow in his  father’s footsteps.

In Court Kacheri the redoubtable Pawan Malhotra playing a  smalltown lawyer Harish Mathur with  considerable  community clout, is brilliant.  Ashish Verma in the plum role of  the son  fumbles in two key  dramatic sequences. Overall, he is adequate, though  not as effective  as he  should be.

 It is Puneet Batra(who is  also the serial’s primary writer) who is  outstanding as  Suraj,Harish Mathur’s apprentice  and Suraj’s brother-from-another-mother, who brings  an added emotional  dimension  to the narrative. Suraj is  utterly devoted to his mentor and father-figure. But  he  also wants to break away and do something  in his own.

Batra confers  an immense  volume of empathy and  worldlywisdom to his  role. This  could be partly due to  the fact   that he has written the character and  knows it  inside-out.

I have  very rare  come across series where even the smallest character(for example, Satywan  played  by Bhushan Vikas who is fighting  a divorce case) is made memorable. In that sense  Court  Kacheri is quite the  Sholay of the  streaming platform. It may  not  have the courtroom grandeur and  reformist vision of Pink . But  what the script says  about our legal system’s  durability and relevance, in  spite of the anomalies, is  worth paying attention to.You can’t write off an institution  just  because  some of its practice and  practitioners  suck.

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