After a long while, I must confess, I have found myself addicted to a television soap. The last time I felt so excited about watching a television series was way back in the good ole' Doordarshan days of the 80's and early 90's - before satellite television announced its arrival on Indian shores.
Imagine my surprise then at serependitiously catching a gripping Turkish series play on Indian television at prime time! For a series that has its origins in a book, the Turkish serial, Fatmagul is
quite a treat to watch. A refreshing storyline, the plot brings together a host
of issues ranging from socio-cultural differences impacting human relationships
on the one side to an ever increasing economic divide and its implications on
collective consciousness, ethics on the other. And all of this pirouetted
around a rape, raising disturbing questions, some of which may not even have
answers!
The plot is gripping and the performances are immensely
engaging to the point that it makes me feel like a bystander watching the story
play out in real-time, experiencing the motions of it all along the journey
from one episode to another. I particularly like the way roles have been
chalked out to give sufficient latitude of expression for individual
performances without overpowering the treatment of or compromising the
storyline; This to the extent that even the ominous background score and scenic
locales are used like rivets to anchor the plot from the sidelines without obstructing
the story as it unfolds or take away from the performances.
Happy days are here again - on television, with international serials like these and their ilk being aired for Indian audiences who crave for meaningful visual content that appeals (as against appalls, given the saas-bahu drama we otherwise get to see unfold on our screens) to their cerebral sensibilities. Truely, as far as quality of Indian television goes, there are (imported) soaps and then there's (desi) lather!
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