HomeEntertainmentDisney+Hotstar’s Showtime review: Emraan Hashmi is deliciously twisted in series that underwhelms
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Disney+Hotstar’s Showtime review: Emraan Hashmi is deliciously twisted in series that underwhelms

Produced by Dharmatic and chockfull of celebrity cameos (Dharmendra, Badshah, Janhvi Kapoor, Mrunal Thakur, Neha Dhupia and Angad Bedi), Showtime is stuck somewhere between self-awareness and self-seriousness.

March 08, 2024 / 14:03 IST
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Showtime on Disney + Hotstar: Emraan Hashmi plays Raghu Khanna, the acidic, impatient heir to Viktory Studio, a fictional bigwig in the Hindi cinema space. (Photo courtesy Disney+Hotstar)
Showtime on Disney + Hotstar: Emraan Hashmi plays Raghu Khanna, the acidic, impatient heir to Viktory Studio, a fictional bigwig in the Hindi cinema space. (Photo courtesy Disney+Hotstar)

Ek kahani hoti hai, hero-heroine hote hai, naach gaana hota hai, bawaal hota hai,” a man says, his arms spread wide as he draws a mental map of the milestones Hindi cinema has unfortunately overlooked, in a scene from Disney+Hotstar’s Showtime. It’s a casual conversation where a common but entitled man (Vijay Raaz) tries to educate a seasoned film producer about ingredients missing from his recent buffet of stories.

The exchange quietly pronounces the ineptitude of those at the helm of the artistic process, and the irony that everyone but the people making these films claims to know what they are talking about. When really nobody knows anything. The evolution of storytelling can neither be shaped nor controlled, it can really only be experienced and endured. To which effect, Showtime is at its best as this pulpy high-wire act of running a fundamentally flawed business, which flails when it also wants to earn the decorative ribbons of prestige.

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Emraan Hashmi plays Raghu Khanna, the acidic, impatient heir to Viktory Studio, a fictional bigwig in the Hindi cinema space. Khanna doesn’t quite see eye-to-eye with his ailing father, an outdated romantic played by the reliable Naseeruddin Shah. While the son has redirected Viktory to edgy, bank-breaking (pan-India?) projects, his father yearns for the innocence and charm of yesteryear, the cinema of lore and gold dust.