Geeks logo

Scam 1992: The Harshad Mehta Story

A Web series Review, Story overviews, No Spoilers, And Famous Dialogues

By Rakshit ShahPublished 3 years ago 7 min read
2
Image of Scam 1992 web series cover banner via SonyLiv™

Hanshal Mehta’s series is an immersive look at how celebrity stockbroker Harshad Mehta became the face of one of India’s largest financial scams in 1992.

Scam 1992: The Harshad Mehta Story

(9.5/10 Ratings by 54319 people on IMDB)

Below the trailer is the promising trailer, Such a web series will increase financial literacy in India. Glad that SonyLiv covered it.

  • What if Nirmala sitaraman (Minister of Finance of India since 2019) was a finance minister at that time?
  • Can we all agree on the fact that this web series was way more informative and interesting than any Bollywood movie?
  • The scam but the same time inspiration of all the beginners of the market?
  • Am I the only one who is thinking like “Harshad Mehta wasn’t a scammer, He was a legendary intelligent player! There are only a few unique people like him…”

Another one,

Netflix: our sacred games is best

Prime video: our Mirzapur is the best

Sony Liv: hold my Beer xD

We have lots of thoughts, questions, problems… we need to look forward and move on after tackling up the situations…

Set in the 1980s & 90s Bombay, Scam 1992 follows the life of Harshad Mehta, a stockbroker who single-handedly took the stock market to dizzying heights & his catastrophic downfall. Directed by National Award-winning filmmaker Hansal Mehta. Based on journalist Debashis Basu & Sucheta Dalal’s book "The Scam”.

The Book and TV Series Explanation

In the bull market that is Indian streaming TV, Scam 1992 arrives at scratch a specific itch: a show with a journalistic bent. The gold standard is David Simon’s expansive productions, not just The Wire but also Show Me A Hero and The Deuce. These shows vary tonally and in subject matter, but their basic impulse is towards long-form storytelling. The same can be said for Hansal Mehta’s series (streaming on SonyLIV), which tracks the rise and fall of Harshad Mehta, for a while India’s most famous stockbroker, then its most notorious scamster.

When Harshad (Pratik Gandhi) first steps onto the floor of the Bombay Stock Exchange, he’s frozen in delight, even though everyone around him is frantically buying and selling. He’s found a home and yet, his place isn’t among the shouters. He wants to be the one who makes them shout. Because he has no wealthy backers, he establishes contacts in trade unions to keep track of management decisions and uses that to bet on stocks (in Oliver Stone’s Wall Street, still the best film in this genre, Bud Fox also got a leg up by providing insider information). Soon, Harshad is on the rise, calling the shots in the stock market, then in the money market. But his instinct is always to game the system, and eventually, the system turns on him.

Scam 1992 is linear, detailed, and dogged. It isn’t shy about peppering its conversations with finance talk and market jargon, but co-directors Hansal Mehta and Jai Mehta and writers Sumit Purohit, Saurav Dey, Vaibhav Vishal, and Karan Vyas find inventive ways to dress up the exposition. I was encouraged by a detail in the show's first scene. A nervous whistleblower (Sharib Hashmi) arrives at the Mumbai Times of India office looking for an editor. The first person he comes across, under a large cutout of the Common Man, is cartoonist R.K. Laxman (happily, the show uses actual names, from Reserve Bank of India governor S. Venkitaramanan to prime minister P.V. Narasimha Rao). They have a short exchange and Laxman deposits him in the editor’s office.

There was any number of ways that man could have ended up in the office but I can’t think of a neater solution than this. Similarly, a scene with three of Mehta’s detractors discussing the market takes place in a dance bar, not unlike Sean Parker in The Social Network yelling over the noise of a club to Mark Zuckerberg. Other scenes are constructed around cricket and golf games, over dessert in a restaurant. It’s not quite The Big Short subbing in Anthony Bourdain and Margot Robbie to explain financial impropriety, but it’s definitely a dose of sugar where none would have been fatal.

The ordering and drinking of tea is a recurring motif. Harshad first talks of insider trading over chai outside the stock exchange. Later, when he wants to show how financially sound he is, he gives instructions to all the local tea shops to bill him for his fellow brokers’ expenses. In the State Bank of India office, as the '92 scam threatens to break (he’s taken ₹500 crores of their money), he's offered tea by the office boy without the boss saying anything - a testament to his stature. He pronounces the tea bitter; later, when he returns their money, he says it's sweet. Tea also figures prominently in the meetings of Sucheta Dalal (Shreya Dhanwanthary), the reporter who breaks the story, with her sources.

Gandhi's sunny performance suggests how Mehta’s charisma could have overridden the ethical concerns his investors and creditors had, while Dhanwanthary’s Dalal is a closer approximation of a doughty journalist than anything Hindi film has managed in recent years. But it’s the supporting performances that really sing (credit to Mukesh Chhabra's pinpoint casting as well). There’s an excellent rogue’s gallery: Satish Kaushik as a foul-mouthed Seth, his three minions like a Greek chorus, Nikhil Dwivedi and Shadaab Khan as smooth, smarmy bankers. Rajat Kapoor seems to enjoy himself playing a blunt instrument of a CBI investigator (“Surprise!” he shouts cheerfully when Harshad opens the door to a raid). Anant Mahadevan is wonderfully dry as the RBI governor, and Chirag Vohra, as Mehta’s long-time associate, is a tremendous study in moral weakness.

At 10 episodes of 50 minutes each, there’s enough time for the show to stretch out and introduce incidental characters and subplots. My favorite passage involves an SBI employee named Sitaraman (Jamini Pathak), who’s given Mehta the 500 crores and left for his son’s mundan in Palani, Tamil Nadu. Once the story breaks that Mehta is using bank funds to play the market, the SBI head sends employees to personally bring Sitaraman back. In a shorter series, this semi-comic interlude wouldn’t be possible - it’s not even necessary here. There are dozens of scenes like this, which give the impression of a whole complex world, not just whatever’s going on with Mehta.

Towards the end, there’s an attempt to say, look, Harshad might have been wrong but so was everyone else. Yet, for most of its running time, the series manages to balance its admiration for him with a clear-eyed view of the devastation he caused. Some of the most incisive acting on Gandhi’s part is the look of utter incomprehension when Harshad tries and fails to bluster his way through his problems in the later episodes. It’s rather poignant that he’s the last to realize he’s not the messiah, he’s just a very naughty boy.

Famous Dialogues from series "Scam 1992: The Harshad Mehta Story"

Adapted from journalist Sucheta Dalal and Debashish Basu’s book The Scam: Who Won, who Lost, who Got Away, Scam 1992 - The Harshad Mehta Story depicted the Indian stock market scam through a web series.

The series is not only intriguing but has some very prominent dialogues.

Scam 1992 Famous Dialogs | Image via 9Mood

"JAB JEB ME MONEY HO NA, TOH KUNDALI ME SHANI HONE SE KOI FARAK NAHI PADTA"

"When there is no money in your pocket, it does not matter if Saturn is in your horoscope"

Scam 1992 Famous Dialogs | Image via 9Mood

"MAIN CIGARETTE NAHI PEETA PAR JEB ME LIGHTER ZARUR RAKHTA HOO DHAMAKA KARNE KE LIYE"

Scam 1992 Famous Dialogs | Image via 9Mood

TUMHARI AB AISI G**ND PHATNE WALI HAI NA, 24 GHANTE SILNE BAITHEGA TAB BHI NAHI HOGA

Scam 1992 Famous Dialogs | Image via 9Mood

"LOCHA, LAFDA AUR JALEBI FAFDA - ISKO GUJARATI KE LIFE SE KOI NIKAAL NAHI SAKTA"

"Locha, Lafada and Jalebi Fafda - Nobody can remove it from Gujarati life"

Scam 1992 Famous Dialogs | Image via 9Mood

"SHARE MARKET ITNA GEHRA KUAN HAI JO PURE DESH KI PAISE KI PYAAS BUJHA SAKTA HAIN"

"The share market is such a deep well that can quench the thirst for money all over the country."

Scam 1992 Famous Dialogs | Image via 9Mood

"SUCCESS KYA HAI? - FAILURE KE BAAD KA CHAPTER"

"What is success? - A Chapter after failure"

Scam 1992 Famous Dialogs | Image via 9Mood

"PROFIT DIKHTA HAI, TOH HAR KOI JHUKTA HAI"

"Profit shows, everyone Bowes"

Scam 1992 Famous Dialogs | Image via 9Mood

"EMOTION ME INSAAN HAMESHA GALTI KARTA HAI"

"Man always makes mistakes in emotion"

Scam 1992 Famous Dialogs | Image via 9Mood

"FREE MEIN TOH MAIN MERE BAAP KO BHI TIP NAHI DETA"

"I do not even tip my father for free..."

Hope you enjoyed the article, please comment and share it with your friends.

Originally published at 9Mood by Author Rakshit Shah.

review
2

About the Creator

Rakshit Shah

I am Computer Engineer and love to make websites and software. I am really eager to know about anything. I am curious to read and write cool stuff.

Reader insights

Be the first to share your insights about this piece.

How does it work?

Add your insights

Comments

There are no comments for this story

Be the first to respond and start the conversation.

Sign in to comment

    Find us on social media

    Miscellaneous links

    • Explore
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Support

    © 2024 Creatd, Inc. All Rights Reserved.