‘Jai Mahendran’ review: An engaging show about government office politics

The Malayalam series on Sony LIV stars Saiju Kurup, Suhasini Maniratnam and Miya George.

‘Jai Mahendran’ review: An engaging show about government office politics

Join our WhatsApp Community to receive travel deals, free stays, and special offers!
- Join Now -

Join our WhatsApp Community to receive travel deals, free stays, and special offers!
- Join Now -

How engaging can a show on the mundane workings of a tahsildar office be? This is the challenge ahead for Malayalam filmmaker Srikanth Mohan in Jai Mahendran – which he aces for the most part.

The six-episode series on Sony LIV follows the lives of revenue department employees in a small town in Kerala. There’s nothing unfamiliar about the set-up. Yet, in Jai Mahendran, this is also where the fun lies.

Landline phones are perennially off the hook. Palms are routinely greased for even petty tasks, while incorruptible citizens run around to get their work done. Title deeds are assigned to favourites (payment in biryanis is accepted). Even the chauffeur gets kickbacks.

Leading the pack of file-pushers is deputy tahsildar Mahendran (Saiju Kurup). Mahendran loves making promises, whether to the bhajji stall owner squatting on government-owned land or the government employee with a bird problem in his office. But when a strict new boss (Suhasini Maniratnam) is appointed, the office’s functioning is severely disrupted.

Rahul Riji Nair’s tight writing ensures that the mini-series stays sharp. In a narrative with barely any over-the-top drama, the comedy flows from the absurdist moments that happen to bored inhabitants of a government office.

We have a clerk worried about the crunchiness of his unniappams rather than the...

Read more