What hustle? What Mumbai? One of the most confusing things in Call Me Bae â a new comedy series starring Ananya Panday and streaming on Prime Video â is a generic rap number that plays in the initial episodes, reminding you how, once youâre there, the city of dreams will grind you down. This is a riches-to-rags comedy that hopes to amuse by airdropping its impossibly ditzy protagonist into the cut and thrust of ordinary Mumbai. Except, it wouldnât know ordinary Mumbai if it sat next to it on the Virar local, sweating profusely or watching Taarak Mehta episodes.
The protagonist is Bella Chowdhury (Panday), or just Bae. A rich South Delhi socialite, sheâs spurned by her husband, business tycoon Agastya (Vihaan Samat), after he catches her dallying with the trainer. A series of vaguely defined circumstances parks Bae, with her menagerie of expensive handbags, in Mumbai. Shunned by family and friends, Bae resolves to reclaim her sense of self-worth. This proves somewhat challengingâ since Baeâs qualifications include, among other things, âpsychic vegan cheese and wine pairingâ and âDavid Beckham studiesâ. She also calls an autorickshaw âtuktukâ (Kim and Khloé Kardashian, jetting in for the Ambani wedding two months ago, did a whole lot better).
Luckily, Bae has one saving grace. She once did a course in Social Media Journalism, or, as she herself puts it, âhow to do in-depth stories in less than 140 charactersâ. This wins her an internship at a leading news channel where the staff roam around in leopard and spaceman costumes. Nevertheless, Bae begins to earn, under her own steam, and has soon built herself a small posse of supporters.
The series, created by Ishita Moitra and directed by Collin DâCunha, has a disarmingly literal sense of humour. Bae is born with a literal golden spoon. She is scrupulously trained by her status-obsessed, fascinator-sporting mother (Mini Mathur) to become a trophy wife; an actual trophy flashes during the said disclosure. Some lines catch you by surprise (âDinesh… letâs go to spaceâ; âHi Faye! Iâm Baeâ). Yet the wordplay isnât matched by innovative dramatic situations. There are excruciating flashbacks to Baeâs less-than-perfect pastâto her struggles with alcoholism and shoplifting, to fragments of her fraying marriage, to the time she volunteered at an animal shelter in New York.
Call Me Bae (Hindi)
Creator: Ishita Moitra
Cast: Ananya Panday, Vir Das, Gurfateh Pirzada, Varun Sood, Vihaan Samat, Muskkaan Jaferi, Niharika Dutt, Lisa Mishra, Mini Mathur
Episodes: 8
Run-time: 35 to 40 minutes
Storyline: Bella Chowdhury, an Internet-famous socialite, has to navigate ordinary Mumbai after an unexpected scandal severs her past ties
Call Me Bae has too many Western sitcoms on its mind to fully become its own show. While Bae name-checks The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, there are shades of Schittâs Creek, 2 Broke Girls and Emily in Paris. Baeâs globe-trotting anecdotes arenât nearly as fascinating as those of Alexis Rose in Schittâs Creek. Mumbai, meanwhile, hardly registers as a backdrop. The âLosttelâ Bae checks into early on is a hippie-chic commune that can exist anywhere; her next house, shared with a colleague, is as spacious and moodily lit as you will expect from a Dharmatic production.
More than the #MeToo track that springs up midway through, with Bae and her gang chasing up an anonymous tip, the series is more engaging in its quieter, throwaway moments. At least one relationship, on the sidelines, blooms unexpectedly. The series may also have something interesting to say about mothers and childrenâand filial relationships in general. When a character complains that, being the child of a single mom, she was never âpamperedâ, another responds by saying that he was always pampered, though his mom, too, was single. âShe would make me tea with lemon, ginger, cinnamon,â he recalls with love. There are different shades of parenting, and different shades of growth.
After Gehraiyaan (2022) and Kho Gaye Hum Kahan(2023), Panday once again plays a character who is, to put it politely, in her proximate wheelhouse. Her daffy, upbeat exuberance carries large swathes of dead narrative. Yet, it isnât the most difficult roleâbeyond the fact that Bae is naturally nice, and enjoys getting plastered in moments of emotional stress, there isnât much meat on her gluten-free plate. Vir Das, an instinctive and celebrated comic, wings it in the part of a muckraking anchor. Funniest of all is his managing editor. âWe donât want to be a news channel thatâs on the wrong side of history,â he warns solemnly. Good for you, sir.
Call Me Bae is currently streaming on Amazon Prime Video
Published – September 06, 2024 03:24 pm IST