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This article originally appeared on VICE IN.I’ve never seen anything like Sacred Games, Netflix’s mesmerizing, addictive eight-part crime thriller adapted from Vikram Chandra’s 2006 novel about Mumbai’s crime underworld. As Gaitonde tells us elsewhere, "Kabhi kabhi lagta hai ki apun hi bhagwaan hai.” (“Sometimes I feel like I am God.”) But by the end, even he knows that Gods are unmade just as easily as they are made. In that one frame, we have goddess and gangster in an unholy pact, a traditional deity sharing space with a modern power-wielder who bends religion to his own ends.
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We see a glimpse of an amusing scene from this serial, where she fells portly demons with laser beams from her forehead but it turns out that Nayanika herself has long been exploited and manipulated, and there is a short but vivid nightmare scene where-dressed in full Shakti garb-she has her throat cut from behind by her underworld patron.
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It involves an actress named Nayanika (Geetanjali Thapa), who plays the lead role in a mythological TV soap about the goddess Shakti. The poison in this case may be a roomful of fake currency discovered by the investigators.īut for me, one of the show’s emblematic images is, again, one that doesn’t come from the book. One episode is titled “Halahala”, after the poison that threatens to envelop the world when Gods and demons churn the ocean together for nectar (another reminder that when it comes to religion, it is never easy to separate the bad from the good). Shortly after this, we see the actors playing the mythological heroes, still in costume, dancing at a very modern party. The tacky promotion for a cola drink (Gaitonde’s own brand, “Apna Cola”) involves a Ramayana-inspired scene where the wounded Lakshmana recovers-and jumps into his brother Rama’s arms-after drinking the beverage.
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Little wonder that the series has plenty of religious iconography, much of it startling in its juxtaposing of the old with the new.
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The personal and the political merge as Gaitonde narrates his story, making colourful, throwaway remarks about minority appeasement by Rajiv Gandhi and the Congress, the growing influence of the TV serial Ramayana, and the subsequent rise to power of those who would destroy mosques or commit honour killings. Still later, as he becomes the leader of a gang that protects Hindu interests, his career runs parallel to-and comes to define-the politicisation of religion and the rise of hardline communalism in 1980s India. Later, by killing his larger-than-life mentor Salim Kaka, he symbolically absorbs the dead man’s powers and aura, and takes his place. Among Gaitonde’s first blasphemous acts-one that will ironically set him on the path to becoming God-like-is to conceal chicken bones in the rice served at a “pure vegetarian” restaurant for Brahmins, where he works as a waiter. " Dharmon ka roop yeh hai," a savant (the brilliant Pankaj Tripathi) explains to his followers, " Raahgir ko prem se ghar bulao, phir usski aatma par kabzaa karo."Ĭlosely linked to this theme is the idea, present throughout the Gaitonde story, that new deities can supplant the old ones that fresh cults may be created around politicians, gangsters, swamis. Writers Smita Singh, Varun Grover and Vasant Nath turn this old tale into a metaphor for religion itself, drawing people into its fold, offering them hospitality and a sense of belonging, before destroying them. In this context, one of the show’s intriguing departures from the book is its use of the Atapi-Vatapi legend about demon brothers (episode three is named for them) who invite weary travelers home for a meal, feed them generously, and then, using the dark arts, tear them asunder. Just as notably, the series uses its own methods to stress the idea of religion as something that can be both nurturing and cannibalistic: a beast that consumes innocents, while providing opportunities for the shrewd. But it probably needed a Netflix original series-as opposed to a feature film subject to regular censorship-to get away with lines like the one mentioned above, with a strong cuss word in the same sentence as “Bhagwaan”. God and religion were already important elements in Sacred Games the novel-mainly in Gaitonde’s journey from being agnostic to becoming involved with the faith business as an underworld don, and influenced by a “Guruji”.
