TVF’s web series Space Gen: Chandrayaan traces India’s journey from the Chandrayaan-2 setback to the Chandrayaan-3 triumph, but lacks narrative depth.
Story Rooted in a Historic Moment
August 23, 2023 marked a defining chapter in India’s space history when ISRO successfully landed the Vikram lander near the Moon’s south pole, making India the first nation to achieve this feat. Set against this historic backdrop, TVF’s web series Space Gen: Chandrayaan revisits the journey that began with the failed landing attempt of Chandrayaan-2 in July 2019.
Chandrayaan-2 Failure and the Inquiry
The series opens with the tense moments following the Vikram lander’s crash. Inside ISRO, introspection and accountability take center stage. Principal Scientific Advisor Rakesh Mohanty (played by Gopal Dutt) forms an inquiry committee, placing the responsibility on the newly appointed ISRO chief Sudarshan Ramaiya (Prakash Belawadi). From here, the narrative explores institutional pressure, professional responsibility, and scientific self-reflection.
Characters Reflecting Mission Complexity
The probe brings several key figures under scrutiny—Project Director Yamini Mudaliar (Shriya Saran), lander engineer Arjun Verma (Nakul Mehta), and rover designer Jayaram (Danish Sait). Arjun becomes the primary scapegoat for the failed mission, while the story layers in his personal trauma of losing his father during the Kargil War. This emotional thread attempts to humanize the scientific struggle behind the mission.
Direction and Screenplay Fall Short
Directed by Anant Singh, the series falters mainly due to its screenplay. Instead of delving deeper into scientific processes and technical rigor, the narrative leans heavily on melodrama. Several scenes fail to leave a lasting impact, despite the fact that the real-life events themselves carried immense dramatic weight.
Performances and Technical Execution
Prakash Belawadi stands out as the ISRO chief, delivering a restrained and credible performance that anchors the show. Shriya Saran delivers a competent but unremarkable act, while Nakul Mehta brings energy to his role, occasionally tipping into loudness.
On the technical front, weak VFX emerges as a major drawback. Launch and space sequences—expected to be the show’s high points—often resemble video-game visuals, diluting the intended grandeur.
Strong Subject, Weaker Presentation
The core theme of Space Gen: Chandrayaan—learning from failure to achieve historic success—is inherently inspiring. However, the series struggles to fully capitalize on this strength. Given TVF’s track record with nuanced storytelling in shows like Kota Factory and Panchayat, audience expectations were understandably higher.
“In science, failure is not the end—it is the foundation of the next success,”
— a line delivered by ISRO chief Sudarshan Ramaiya that encapsulates the series’ central message.
Space Gen: Chandrayaan attempts to capture the spirit of India’s lunar mission but remains constrained by a weak screenplay and technical limitations. For viewers curious about the journey behind Chandrayaan-3’s historic success, the series is a one-time watch on JioHotstar—though expectations of a deeply compelling narrative should remain modest.
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