Something was calming and tranquil in Hai Taubba's season 2 fourth episode Blue - I'm so lost in you. The primary season was horrible as is season 2 yet Blue is the exemption. Viewed as a show which shows forgotten sides and spaces of marriage or any relations, Hai Taubba in actuality hangs in the middle being an adult show and being an effective show. It genuinely has the potential however the producers here unfortunately are just worried about the skin shows and cheesy dialogues and character names.
The first episode is a goof of unions. The friends, in reality, are in a turbulent circumstance, one is gay and finding it hard to find perfect love, while different couples are getting separated and one man adores his friend's wife however then a third man enters. So it's difficult to sort out what to comprehend from this poorly written subject. The friends are having a get-together on Valentine's Day and on that Shubh Diwas numerous disclosures are made and after that their life will not continue as before, it's been made sure. The actors appear like they are left free to do anything and the dialogues are incredibly poor.
The subsequent episode "Baal me kuch kala hai" begins with a solid word "consent" and Taniya (Bibriti Chatterjee) is making recordings on the very saying that some don't have the word consent in their dictionary. No doubt, I concur. However, what might be said about a story? Is there any? Taniya goes out on a date with a boy Vivek (Atmadeep Ghosh) which she finds on the internet however all things being equal, he goes with another lady in her space to make some great memories. The lady says, "I booked a two-room suite and my husband is caught up in a conference, you want to spend this night with me?". Such is the screenplay, and in a scene, a lady who works with Taniya and her name is Savita Bhabhi, WOW, asks Taniya, " Why are you so sad? Is your vibrator not working?".
I abandoned this one at that exact instant. The third one is seriously baffling. There are two beginner filmmakers, Sneha and Akash and Akash has written a story that is more similar to ALT Balaji's shows itself, loaded with sex and no core. His girlfriend and co-director Sneha continually says that it appears to be an adult film and not a romantic tale. Also, it appears to be that the art director has taken it a similar way and finishes the set with nude arts and all that which gives the strong adult film vibe. Now, there's Shlok, the fundamental actor who is thinking that it's difficult to perform sexual moments with his co-actor. Furthermore, it is revealed that he's gay.
There's likewise a misogynist point that comes often through the personality of Akash who doesn't offer significance to his girlfriend's thought. The performances are truly poor and nothing truly strong comes out from this story. The story is about self-acceptance and is clear however the track it decides to pass on its message is bizarre in a bad way. The only best dialogue in this episode was "nobody acknowledges a gay actor as a hero in a film". The fourth and the best of the two seasons is Blue. Baljeet Singh Chadda's story and screenplay and dialogues by Ajay Deep Singh are only what is needed to fabricate a delightful romantic tale.
A salesman Trilok (Nishank Verma) and a worker of a hotel Arjan (Advait Kottary) are gays and they have an attraction yet they fraternize as straights, saying that the two of them have girlfriends. But, life takes a dark turn and Arjan passes. Reading the book of Arjan, Trilok, at last, becomes acquainted with, that Arjan adored him this while and this makes him feels the passionate feelings he has for Arjan. But, there's a lovely angle of Jannat (Ankita Chakraborty) in this story. This episode is well-written and endearing and loaded up with heart-touching minutes.
There's a scene where Jannat and Trilok sat together and chat about what Arjan felt for him and what she feels for Arjan. That moment has no background score and the magic that was required is there. The characters are simply beautiful and Nishank Verma gave an extraordinary performance. This was so calming and poignant in a manner I can't tell. I wished every one of the episodes could have been dealt with very much like this, with delicacy.
Hai Taubba Season 2, aside from episode 4, is ill-written and poorly executed. Homosexuality is dominating in this season however how it ought to have been introduced it never does that. It comes up with surprising plots that could work if it is been made with a heart, not with a sole motivation to draw in crowds by giving them hot scenes and superfluous bold dialogues and characters, I mean c'mon, there's a character named Savita Bhabhi. The creators should take these fragile subjects and taboo issues and LGBTQ connections seriously and not simply use them for money-making. It comes up short on the character development and the punch like Blue has. Two stars only for Blue!!
Rating:- 2/5
Now streaming on ALT Balaji.
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