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Till wealth do us part
Mint Mumbai
|August 12, 2023
Marriages change shape. The anything-goes elasticity of newly-weds sooner or later becomes more defined. For better or for worse, marriages solidify, and, in keeping with that, sometimes they crumble.

Shapeshifting happens also with stories about marriages and Made In Heaven a series about wedding planners, returning to Amazon Prime with a much awaited second season, four years after the first-isn't quite the show it used to be.
Created by Zoya Akhtar and Reema Kagti, Made In Heaven started as a swishy, sexy, incisive take on the hypocrisies and hi-jinks of Delhi weddings, increasingly overblown shindigs designed to out-Instagram each other. Focusing on the planners ironing out problems born out of privilege and bigotry, it was a sort of Call My Agent! for the shaadi market. The new season, comprising seven episodes each more than an hour long, is a slower, sadder drama.
One achievement of season I was the show's protagonist, Tara Khanna. Played by a poised Sobhita Dhulipala, Tara-one of the two founders of the titular wedding planning firm was revealed as an opportunistic social climber who had entrapped a wealthy husband by any means necessary. Dhulipala shines particularly bright in silent moments, like when she longingly caresses a beloved green handbag. Tara is the kind of unapologetic anti-hero we rarely see and she continues to make questionable choices while refusing to be judged by anyone, from mother to lover to business partner.
This story is from the August 12, 2023 edition of Mint Mumbai.
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