Homicide in Mahim, JioCinema’s new authentic sequence based mostly on Jerry Pinto’s novel of the identical title, is against the law thriller that tells the story of a brutal homicide of a homosexual intercourse employee in a public rest room at Mumbai’s Mahim railway station. Starring fashionable character actions Vijay Raaz and Ashutosh Rana, the sequence blends typical crime thriller narrative with social commentary, placing its performances entrance and centre of the unfolding investigation.
All via eight episodes, Raaz’s police inspector and Rana’s former journalist – each of whom are actually estranged pals – attempt to clear up the grotesque case in their very own distinct methods. By means of the course of the investigation, we’re taken to homosexual golf equipment, queer events, rallies, and the forbidden bylanes of Mumbai, the place the awful and alarming world of homosexual prostitution exists after darkish. The sequence dives into the lives of intercourse staff, depicting their plight and persistence with discernible care.
Whereas Homicide in Mahim appears a bit overstretched and predictable with overwhelmed plots, acquainted loopholes and the heavy-handed social commentary originally, it quickly grows into an unmissable piece of artwork with highly effective performances. If you happen to’ll be a little bit affected person with the sequence, no less than until the third episode, you’re in for a cinematic delight that takes up complicated themes effortlessly.
Shivaji Satam in a nonetheless from Homicide in Mahim
The present unfolds the assorted layers of homophobia and abuse, from offensive name-calling and outright prejudice-driven cruelty to honey-trapping crimes the place queer individuals, who’re being blackmailed, have nowhere to show to for assist, together with the police. Homicide in Mahim covers the engulfing impression of homophobia throughout courses; from penniless queers being pressured into prostitution to even these positioned at highly effective ranks, scared of popping out of the closet, the sequence seems on the issues of the LGBTQ neighborhood with a large lens. Depiction of queer lives can also be finished with a pure tone and doesn’t come off as pressured, overly dramatic, or pompous.
There’s a specific scene displaying two lesbian lovers in a room panic when their dad and mom, who nonetheless do not learn about their sexuality, come over unannounced. The response of all of the characters is fortunately measured and harmless and the scene normalises queer lives.
Nonetheless, Homicide in Mahim additionally makes an attempt to play it protected at some factors, particularly when Rana’s Peter Fernandes and his spouse are proven to be uncomfortable with the potential of their son being homosexual. Clueless as to what is likely to be the “treatment” to this “situation,” in some scenes the couple comes off as a dummy mannequin of what is likely to be fallacious with a mother or father of a queer baby, solely to develop into what a really perfect mother or father ought to be like later.
Nonetheless, the present is not nearly homosexuality. Homicide in Mahim additionally subtly takes on the conflicts and complexities of a father-son relationship. What a ravishing portrayal! It’s so uncommon for the Indian movie and tv trade to choose up on this theme and do justice to it. Whether or not it’s the estranged relationship between Vijay Raaz’s Shiva and his grumpy father, performed by Shivaji Satam (of ACP Pradyuman fame from C.I.D) or Shiva and his teenage son, who’re slowly drifting aside, the sequence handles the dynamic with tenderness. I might discover myself smiling at so many scenes within the second half of the present, a few of which evoked the amusing relationship between Amitabh Bachchan’s grumbling father and Deepika Padukone’s headstrong daughter in Piku.
There’s a scene, which maybe will sit with me for a very long time, the place a junior police constable finds his teenage son’s soiled magazines. One would anticipate admonition to comply with, however the in any other case comical character sensibly handles the state of affairs with out pushing his son right into a pit of guilt and disgrace. It is a easy but highly effective scene that depicts the unsaid tenderness between a father and a son.
Vijay Raaz and Shivani Raghuvanshi in a nonetheless from Homicide in Mahim
Homicide in Mahim additionally takes a satirical stance towards sensationalism-driven media and detached police officers, who conveniently distort information earlier than chewing away “sensible information writeups” or “official statements” sans any dependable supply of knowledge, including gas to the already raging hearth of homophobia. There’s a scene the place the press is seen accusing an previous man of being a pedophilic, homophobic monster on flimsy floor. Because the media inquisition piles on, the character helplessly observes indignant protesters outdoors his home. The fictionalised scene is not too removed from truth, underscoring a number of comparable real-life incidents the place information reporters conveniently disregarded ethics for clicks and views.
Though Homicide in Mahim has loads of intense sequences that decide up on the smallest nuances of the human psyche and feelings, the makers have completely struck a steadiness with frequent comedian reduction to interrupt the stress — typically vital for a movie or present with a stark social message to attraction to the plenty, who would not in any other case flip to and even have entry to pick cinema accepted by the critics. The makers have made a good try at conveying complicated and vital points in an accessible and palatable method, with out compromising on the intricacies of the topic at hand.
Homicide in Mahim does drag within the first few episodes, however with its transferring storyline, highly effective performances and sensible cinematography, the sequence shines slowly however absolutely.