A new generation of storytellers from the global South Asian diaspora is redefining the immigrant narrative, moving away from familiar tales of cultural clashes toward something more fluid, personal, and surreal. Mawaan Rizwan’s Juice is a primary example of this evolution, a series that operates with the emotional sincerity of a therapy session and the chaotic structure of a cheese-induced dream. In its second season, the show deepens its commitment to this unique vision.
It presents the story of Jamma, a young British-Pakistani man whose identity is a vibrant collage of YouTube comic, Parisian-trained clown, and devoted son. His external life is in shambles, having lost both his job and his boyfriend. This forces him inward, and the season becomes a map of his psyche, a place where reality is unstable and the visual language of sitcoms, horror films, and shadow puppetry are all used to articulate a profound emotional truth. The series is a brilliant execution of a new kind of diasporic dream-logic, one where the search for love requires a confrontation with the very self one has constructed.
The Unlikely Couple
The season’s emotional core is the relationship between Jamma and Guy, which is less a simple romantic plot and more a complex negotiation of identity. Their differences are articulated with a sharp, symbolic precision. Guy, a therapist played with gentle restraint by Russell Tovey, embodies a particular form of stable, middle-class British life.
His world is one of order, symbolized by his meticulously decanted cereal and a preference for £31 hand-soap. He represents a kind of quiet assimilation that Jamma, in his glorious chaos, both desires and instinctively resists. Jamma is a walking spectacle of retina-searing fashion and impulsive behavior, a man-child who finds the very idea of organized breakfast foods almost offensive. His entire being is a performance of vibrant, almost defiant, individuality.
The series uses this classic “opposites attract” framework to explore something deeper than comedic friction. Their reconciliation requires Jamma to question the very essence of his personality. The central conflict is not about whether they love each other, but whether Jamma can adapt to Guy’s world without erasing himself. The narrative leans into this by introducing a fantastical element: a mysterious magician who appears and offers to buy Jamma’s soul.
This is a striking metaphor for the central romantic dilemma. Is Jamma’s “soul” the very immaturity and inner clown that defines him? Is the price of admission into a stable, adult relationship the sacrifice of one’s chaotic, creative core? Juice does not offer a simple answer. Instead, it frames Jamma’s path to change as a difficult, often bewildering process of self-discovery, where he must learn to integrate his flamboyant inner world with the practical demands of a partnership. Their palpable chemistry makes this journey feel essential, grounding the surreal flourishes in a relationship that feels both authentic and aspirational.
A Fantastical Visual Landscape
The most distinctive quality of Juice is its audacious visual language, which rejects naturalism in favor of a highly stylized and expressive aesthetic. The production design itself is a key narrative tool. The series uses an exquisitely crafted model town for its exterior shots, a choice that immediately establishes the story’s fairytale quality and signals that its world operates under its own unique rules.
This handcrafted sensibility extends to settings like the home of Jamma’s absentee father, a structure built entirely from cardboard and parcel paper. The space is a poignant symbol of emotional precarity, a home that feels both deeply creative and dangerously fragile. This visual inventiveness is a departure from the gritty social realism that has often defined British television, pointing toward a more magical, introspective mode of storytelling.
This aesthetic can be seen as a form of “indie masala,” a term often used to describe popular Indian cinema’s mixture of genres. While Bollywood’s masala films blend comedy, romance, and action for broad commercial appeal, Juice uses a similar genre-blending technique for a different purpose: to map the fragmented consciousness of its protagonist. The narrative’s grammar is wildly unpredictable.
One scene might be shot with the bright lighting and multi-camera setup of a 1980s American sitcom, complete with canned laughter, only to transition into the shadowy framing of a psychological horror film. These shifts are not random; they are a direct externalization of Jamma’s internal state.
His mind is a collage of his varied life experiences, from his training as a clown to his upbringing in a South Asian family in Britain. The visual style of the show mirrors this hybrid identity, creating an atmosphere that oscillates between whimsical playfulness and a creeping sense of dread. It is a world where anything can happen because it is all filtered through the beautifully unpredictable logic of Jamma’s mind.
A Portrait of a Family in Flux
While the surreal visuals give the show its form, the family dynamics provide its undeniable heart and cultural specificity. The series is grounded by its charming ensemble cast, but it is the portrayal of the matriarch, Farida, that is most compelling. Played by Mawaan Rizwan’s actual mother, the Indian television star Shahnaz Rizwan, Farida is a force of nature.
She possesses an imperious glamor and commanding energy that feels like a direct homage to the grand heroines of classic Hindi cinema. These were women who could dominate a scene with a single withering glance or a declaration of intent. Farida carries that same authority, but it is applied to a thoroughly modern and subversive goal. Her quest is not to arrange a marriage but to hunt down her estranged husband and force him to sign divorce papers, freeing her to pursue her own romantic desires in a “halal way.” This recontextualization of a familiar archetype is both hilarious and powerful.
The casting of the Rizwan family as a fictionalized version of themselves adds a profound layer of authenticity to the proceedings. It is part of a larger, welcome trend in diaspora art, where creators are taking control of their own narratives. This season also takes a significant therapeutic turn. Guy’s work on a book about intimacy provides a framework for the show’s deeper exploration of its characters’ emotional wounds, particularly the “daddy issues” that Jamma and his brother Isaac share.
The central psychodrama becomes Jamma’s struggle with his “inner clown,” his deep-seated need for attention as a substitute for love. His journey toward self-awareness is not depicted as a simple fix but as a messy, ongoing process of reckoning. He must learn to disentangle his performative self from his authentic one. The result is an emotionally resonant character arc that culminates in a deeply moving and earned conclusion, solidifying the series as a thoughtful and visually arresting work of television.
Full Credits
Director: Eros V
Writers: Mawaan Rizwan, Nabhaan Rizwan, Emily Lloyd-Saini
Producers and Executive Producers: Mawaan Rizwan, Phil Clarke, Hannah Moulder, Ali Carron, Maisah Thompson
Cast: Mawaan Rizwan, Russell Tovey, Nabhaan Rizwan, Shahnaz Rizwan, Jeff Mirza, Emily Lloyd-Saini, Hugh Coles, Kevin Eldon
Composer: Mawaan Rizwan























































