Language: English Remember how Season 1 of Never Have I Ever ended? Don’t? Read through our
recap
. The Malibu mountains, sky, and sand blended into each other as Devi (Maitreyi Ramakrishnan) reconciled with her mom Nalini (Poorna Jagannathan) to spread her dad’s ashes into the sea. His favourite song ‘Beautiful Day’ by U2 amped up the moment, before Devi shared a passionate kiss with her nemesis-turned-lover Ben. Season 2 starts right there. Nalini interrupts the kiss and mocks Devi, “When I die, you’ll have sex on top of my grave. I hope it’s a closed casket.” That is the tone and zone of Never Have I Ever, the coming-of-age show created and written by Mindy Kaling and Lang Fisher. They never let the show get too sappy but ensure that it’s also not just a surface skimmer. They break the emotional high Season 1 left us with the same reflex jerk that Devi cannot help but have whenever life gets marginally smooth for her (does it ever?).
Secondly, Devi never makes you feel indifferent towards her because of the powerhouse performer that Ramakrishnan is. Season 1 showed that she was a rare find but she only proves her indispensability in Season 2.
While that season was skewed towards probably Kaling’s experience as an Indian-American girl growing up in the US, Ramakrishnan owns the follow-up by carving out a distinct identity for Devi. We no longer see her as a Mindy Kaling gone 2020 but as Devi herself, with her own whims, quirks, and vulnerabilities. Sample the scene when Devi, with virgin innocence intact, tells Paxton and Ben, “But I like you both,” when she is caught double dating, or playing doubles as narrator John McEnroe puts it. A lesser actor could not have pulled that off — the virgin innocence I mean, not the double dating — that’s not virgin at all. As long as Devi is the pivot, Never Have I Ever Season 2 remains thoroughly engaging and occasionally exciting. But with this season, Kaling and Co try to branch into the arcs of the other characters that hover around Devi. And this branching out cannot exactly be called blooming. [caption id=“attachment_9808181” align=“alignnone” width=“640”]
Poorna Jagannathan in Never Have I Ever Season 2[/caption] It is lovely to see Jagannathan get ample space to exhibit a wide range of moods — because she can, and how! Season 1 saw her fall prey to the monochromatic mother who is always mocking and ridiculing her daughter. The only break in the comic cacophony was the choke in her voice as she tells Devi in the finale, “Sometimes even I think I should’ve been the one who died.” Season 2, however, gives her a homecoming she did not expect in India (it’s fun to see her get incessant burns from her own mother), a romantic angle with a fellow dermatologist (played by Common), and chances to be a cool mom. It is the way Jagannathan fills her eyes with tears and smiles when she has to close the door on newfound love, puts on a poker face when being fed South Indian thalis, and switches pitch from concerned to stern towards her daughter that you realise she deserves a spin-off. [caption id=“attachment_9808201” align=“alignnone” width=“640”]
Maitreyi Ramakrishnan, Lee Rodriguez, and Ramona Young in Never Have I Ever Season 2[/caption] But the other character arcs do not make you feel as invested. The least of them is Kamala’s (Richa Moorjani). It is certainly novel to place her in a stem cell research lab and battle gender discrimination at workplace (as Devi says, “People don’t know you’re this smart because you’re so hot.”). But that part of the story never takes off and remains a dispensable segue. Devi’s BFFs Elena Wong (Ramona Young) and Fabiola Torres (Lee Rodriguez) are given minor arcs of their own but both pale in comparison to Devi’s by tints. Young has impeccable comic timing but her relationship with Malcolm Stone (Tyler Alvarez) is only summarised, never explored. The same holds true to an extent for Rodriguez’s arc. The idea of a queer girl feeling lost in the lesbian community is a good start but it is not allotted enough room to thrive.
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