HomeNewsBusiness'Matsya Kaand' review: A revenge story that swings from ‘aha!’ to facepalm moments

'Matsya Kaand' review: A revenge story that swings from ‘aha!’ to facepalm moments

Despite imperfections in the MX Player show, Ravii Dubey and Ravi Kishen make for great adversaries in 'Matsya Kaand'.

November 21, 2021 / 15:46 IST
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TV anchor and actor Ravii Dubey is pretty fluid, and his many disguises as a conman work really well in 'Matsya Kaand'.
TV anchor and actor Ravii Dubey is pretty fluid, and his many disguises as a conman work really well in 'Matsya Kaand'.

At one point when the smoke clears, you think it’s Shahid Kapoor in his Kabir Singh avatar. When he’s sleeping on the sofa as an old man, you think it’s Amitabh Bachchan. He has shades of Sonu Nigam as well. TV anchor and actor Ravii Dubey is pretty fluid, and his many disguises as a conman work really well. So Matsya Kaand is about a conman and a cop playing a cat and mouse game and it plays on MX Player.

The thread that runs through the show is the war Mahabharata, and the episodes are named after the characters in the war. And not just the name, the show manages to take the character through the episode. For example, the first episode is called ‘Abhimanyu’ and before you start singing the song refrain ‘Abhimanyu, chakravyuh mein phas gaya hai tu’ from Inquilaab (Amitabh Bachchan), you realise that the story of the brave warrior from the Mahabharata has parallels in the episode. Since it’s the first of 11 episodes, I realised that I had started looking forward to the interesting storytelling device the show uses: Piyush Mishra is Panditji, telling the stories of these characters and simultaneously preparing Matsya (Ravii Dubey) for his revenge. Remember Piyush Mishra telling stories to a captive audience in the film Tamasha? Somewhat like that but in prison!

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Now you might groan at how one prison can have so many cool teaching moments, but then we have seen montages of men in prison exercising and becoming champion fighters in many movies. We have seen in Narcos Mexico (the third season) how an older man offers advice to a man who is not exactly a leader and see how he changes. Then why not get trained to become a conman by learning from men in prison?