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Years
ago, Campus on Zee TV, a show on the lives
of college students had won over the hearts of the
audience. The show was refreshing solely because it
portrayed the lives of students - their bravado, idiosyncrasies,
foolhardiness and their struggle through the adolescent
years.
After
a long lull, on 10 October, another college-based
hour long weekly Jeet launches on Star Plus
in the 9:30 pm slot.
While
Jeet takes us through life in a college, the
channel claims that its treatment is a trifle different.
Campus stories have always been identified with students'
lives, college politics, rave parties, influx of drugs
and booze in the campus among other things. But this
serial takes a peek into the lives of the professors.
Finally, somebody has realised professors are humans
too!
The
show is a breather - at least it digresses from the
saas-bahu plots that Star seems to have an
overdose of right now.
Jeet
is the story of a bunch of conservative teachers,
declining college values and one professor Vikram
Mall (Ankur Nayyar), with eccentric views who tries
to change it. It is also the story of the young English
Literature teacher Janaki Sehgal (Aparnaa Tilak) and
her strife to run her family after her father's death.
Finally, it is the story of this couple, who are destined
to fall in love.
While
Jeet conforms to the usual formula of undying
love, strong principles and struggle to excel, the
channel has to be commended for taking a chance with
a deviant theme of campus issues, nevertheless.
The
serial starts with a couple of in-your-face shots,
as this stylish, boyish proffy Mall, walks into a
campus, with a bag slung across his right shoulder.
At the same time, teachers of the college - including
the principal Dr Venugopal (Arun Govil), the social
studies teacher (Mrinal Kulkarni), vice principal
Dr Rekhari and English teacher Sehgal - are fervently
discussing the students' behaviour. It seems they
have gone a bit out of control.
Even
as they are thinking of ways to control the students,
a fire alarm goes off, causing pandemonium in the
campus. All the kids rush out of their respective
classrooms, only to realize there is no fire - that
it was just another prank played by some students.
Principal
Venugopal rushes out and reprimands the students in
a grave tone. He asks the erring kids to see him in
his office and admit their mistake, lest the entire
college be punished. Saying so, he walks off in a
huff.
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| Ankur
Nayyar and Aparnaa Tilak in a still from 'Jeet' |
Is
that the way to handle adolescent brats? Of course
not, and our hero Mall, who was hiding behind a bush
and eavesdropping all the while, knows better. So,
Mall turns into a private detective and spies around
the college common rooms to find the real culprits
- two boys and one girl. When he does, he enters their
classroom, locks the door and sets the teacher's desk
on fire. He threatens them till the three kids confess.
So here's introducing "Mall, Vikram Mall",
as the maverick professor keeps referring to himself.
The
next few scenes unravel various aspects of Mall -
one learns that he is the college's alumnus, who has
returned after having a successful career elsewhere,
and there are hints of certain tragic incidents in
his life.
The
characters in the show are stereotypes. Mall is the
hero, the clean-shaven, dashing, mischievous yet polite
gentleman, who has rebellious methods of taming the
students. English teacher Sehgal is the heroine -
she is goodhearted but misunderstands Mall and therefore
acts haughty. Dr Rekhari is the conformist vice principal
who hates Mall for his dynamism. As for Venugopal,
he is the fair principal, who always has the best
intentions for his students.
As
for the sets, the campus, the college premises as
well as the classrooms are squeaky clean. Not one
bench seems to be scratched, not one window pane cracked!
Now that seems highly improbable - may be that's why
the staff throws a tantrum when Mall sets a bench
on fire and in another incidents breaks the pane of
the science lab to save a student from committing
suicide.
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| Mrinal
Kulkarni in a still from the serial |
The
acting is mediocre but floats through, thanks to the
unconventional storyline. Pawan Malhotra as a conniving
vice principal is rather convincing, Nayyar as Mall
tries hard to put up the fresh and untouched-by-politics
act; Tilak plays her part, looking rude at one time
and unsure at the others and Mrinal Kulkarni is pleasing
as the understated, practical Social Studies teacher.
Govil does his usual Ram act as the maryada-purush
principal.
To sum it up, the Shristi Arya and Goldie Behl-produced
Jeet has its downs, but it has its ups too.
While a major down is obviously the stereotypical
characters with no dimensions whatsoever, the ups
include the plot itself which seems rather unusual
and the freshness of the entire serial.
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