![]() ![]() Even when things seem unplanned, someone is pulling the strings. The mid-season reveal (technically, the ending of fourth episode) hits the nail on the head and opens up too many avenues to choose from – which is where the show falters.Ĭonvenience, coincidence and hunches rise to the fore. But to take this prerequisite, turn it over it's head and delay the ultimate vengeance is what the show's writers seemed to promised midway. Bajpayee's skills bring to Srikant the thoughtful nonchalance at various points of the show, a prerequisite for any hero, that Bajpayee embodies in his own unique way. It is a bold broad premise with two brilliantly defined narratives in the beginning. The larger premise involves post 2014 India where news is fresher than bread yet older than wine, where inter-religious politics has seeped into the fabric of civilian life and running away from the poisoning impact of it brings one closer to the physical act of doing so. He manages to hold it together with disguised naivety on most occasions and gets the long end of the stick from both the bosses and his housemates, barring a few events. But he lies often, leads an unhealthy lifestyle and tends to be caught between his duty to keep his nation safe and his family intact. Srikant is mostly a good man with an urban, savvy, straight-talking but ignored wife, along with two kids. His job, along with his unit's, is that of Big Brother – surveillance of every digital packet of data emitting from within the premises of the national borders. An underpaid government agent involved in a major capacity to keep the country safe. Srikant Tiwari, Senior Analyst, Threat Analysis & Surveillance Cell (TASC).
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