Kota Factory season 2 takes off where it first left off. Vaibhav (Mayur More), Meena (Ranjan Raj), Uday (Alam Khan), Vartika (Revathi Pillai), and Meenal (Urvi) have returned to school with the goal of getting into IIT. Jeetu sir (Jeetendra Kumar), on the other hand, has quit Prodigy Classes and plans to create his own academy.
The show engrossed its audience by pulling them further into the lives of specific characters such as Vaibhav, Meena, and, most crucially, Jeetu sir, using a similar black and white framework as its predecessor. Even though the story is familiar, filmmaker Raghav Subbu, together with his writer Abhishek Yadav, Puneet Batra, Manoj Kalwani, and Saurabh Khanna, add a genuine heart to it by injecting dollops of compassion into his characters.
There are a few odd details that help to define the characters’ identities and provide a nostalgic worth. The second season is compelling, but it falls short of the original appeal, with tailor-made parts and on-point performances.
Watch Kota Factory Season 2 trailer here:
In Kota Factory season 2, the episodes begin quickly and gradually calmed down as the season progressed. Nonetheless, this exceptional cast of actors, which includes a superb group of young children, works tirelessly to keep the audience engaged and the proceedings moving.
For starters, it loses the sense of urgency, caustic humor, and deep ties that made the first season so compelling. The majority of things are observed from a (figurative) distance here. The plot is tight and demanding, as it always is, but there’s so little going between the lines that you’re left wondering what occurred?
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Jitendra Kumar, often known as Jeetu Bhaiya, bears a great deal of responsibility. Despite having fewer monologues in season 2, he manages to retain the same appeal. This time, he has a sense of emptiness in him. Something has shifted in him, and the layers are progressively revealing themselves.
Mayur More, also known as Vaibhav, has a lot of baggage from his past. While he attends Maheshwari lessons, the ghost of Prodigy hovers above him. Mayur does a fantastic job at expressing himself. The character is one of us or perhaps one of us, and he portrays him as such.
And the rest of the cast, from Ahsaas Channa to Revathi Pillai to Ranjan Raj to Alam Khan, are all well-known personalities who make sure to bring their parts to life.
After all, is said and done, Kota Factory 2 is certainly entertaining, but it lacks soul. Season one’s standout was its innocence, but sadly, the creators focused solely on that without offering anything new.
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