HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentMade In Heaven 2 review: Not quite as path-breaking as the first season but eminently watchable

Made In Heaven 2 review: Not quite as path-breaking as the first season but eminently watchable

In its second season, Zoya Akhtar and Reema Kagti’s acclaimed series takes fewer risks, but remains as entertaining as ever.

August 12, 2023 / 10:54 IST
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Sobhita Dhulipala in a still from Made in Heaven 2, streaming on Amazon Prime Video.

“It doesn’t matter if they are true or not. It’s an ideal the world needs,” Kabir Basrai, the poetic voiceover of Made in Heaven, says at the end of an episode in the show’s new season. It’s a marriage ceremony, set on the banks of the French Riviera, an episode that also accommodates meta humour about sending films to Cannes. It comments on the idealism of the elite, the image of austerity they circulate and the prize of privilege that they hold onto. It’s this idea of rumoured perfection that elite weddings - as maybe elite film festivals - between stars and starlets, maybe stand for. An idea that though only partially true, serves the greater purpose of satisfying, benevolent untruths. In its second, much delayed season, Made in Heaven expands a familiar cast, itemizes their conflicts, somewhat plays it safe, but remains bewitchingly watchable.

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Directed by Reema Kagti, Alankrita Shrivastava, Nitya Mehra and Neeraj Ghaywan, this seven-episode season brings back the fire-fighting duo of Karan (Arjun Mathur) and Tara (Sobhita Dhulipala). Both are now trying to run their somewhat rogue but dogged wedding planning business out of an old Delhi house that belongs to Jauhari, the foul-mouthed goon played in the first season by Vijay Raaz. Tara and Karan are still assisted by Kabir (Shashank Arora) and Jazz (Shivani Raghuvanshi). Joining them is Meher, an empathetic transperson looking for an equally kind lover, and Mona Singh as Bulbul, the benevolent but restrictive new auditor (also Jauhari’s wife). Jim Sarbh and Kalki Koechlin revive their roles as Adil and Faiza, as the couple who have cheated on Tara. Adil is locked in a divorce battle with Tara, while Karan must confront the sight of his cancerous mother urging him to get married despite having come out of the closet. Both grapple with intimate conflicts that threaten to reveal sides of them they’d rather not offer to the world. Sides we’re coached to meticulously hide within the folds of moments that qualify as eccentricity.

Also read: Made in Heaven actor Arjun Mathur: ‘Bollywood has caught the wrong note in depicting gay characters’