Decoupled
starring
R Madhavan
and Surveen Chawla is a story of a couple stuck in a dysfunctional marriage for the sake of their daughter. The couple is not able to decide on the course their unstable marriage should take and the story seems to take many twists and turns through their journey. In an interview, Manu Joseph, creator, and
writer
speaks about the series, his take on marriage, if there will be another season, and much more. Excerpts: Decoupled is unlike anything we’ve seen on the OTT platform, or for that matter anywhere on any platform. What was the takeoff point for the plot? The American writer David Foster once said of another American writer John Updike, “Has the son of a bitch ever had one unpublished thought?” I am one of those guys who do not have a single unpublished thought. Between novels and journalism, I find ways to fully express myself. And everything I write, one way or the other, has always been about human behaviour. But then there has been a type of things that did not fit in journalism, and I have no interest in using them in my novels. And that was the genesis of Decoupled. It’s really is about human behaviour and absurdity and a very loose biography of a marriage. Your protagonist Arya Iyer is a motor-mouthed frank speaker whom you’ve allowed to say any and everything that comes to his mind? Is he your embodiment of that freedom of expression which we have been guaranteed by the Constitution but which we seldom exercise? Like the birds were meant to fly, we were meant to speak, yet we don’t speak our minds anymore. And speaking the mind need not always be about grand things. Arya Iyer does not even comment on politics or race or even gender or politics. If you look at it, everything he says is about minor things. These are things people have thought but they didn’t know that they can say it aloud. There are some very wince-inducing comments on several sacred institutions and ideologies. Do you feel such no-filter outspokenness is possible only on the digital platform? I don’t agree Decoupled does anything more outlandish than what’s possible in Indian journalism, literature, and niche cinema. Look, we are a difficult country for uncompromising observations but there is a type of observation that you can get away with. Writers use their writing for many wrong reasons — to promote an agenda, to hurt, to be sensational. I feel that in India if your writing begins from the wish to just write, or from a good-natured place, or in a naive quest to capture truth, let’s say in an anthropological way, you can travel deep into people’s minds and survive even though it disturbs people. By the way, comedy, at least comedy that interests me, is always anthropology. Now that you have exposed the illicit unhappiness of other people, here is my question: Do you feel being happily married is an oxymoron, a moronic myth? I find marriage extremely interesting. I don’t fully buy the prevalent belief that it is some kind of a cultural invention. Something about it seems very innate. What I’m saying is that if this world is fully destroyed and rebuilt, we will still do two things: we will arrive at around 35% as he pass-mark in math and science; there will be monogamous marriage.
Subhash K Jha is a Patna-based journalist. He has been writing about Bollywood for long enough to know the industry inside out.
Subhash K Jha is a Patna-based journalist. He's been writing about Bollywood for long enough to know the industry inside out.