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Young Sheldon is the pallbearer of the last wisps of The Big Bang Theory nostalgia.
It will keep you glued. But, so does your plate of momos. You relish it as long as it lasts. The satisfaction is, however, short-term.
While your momos leave you stuffed, Young Sheldon leaves you with a nine-year-old who is a social misfit.
He tries hard to make some method of the madness. You gush at his quirks, you adore his pet peeves, you let out a tender-hearted sigh every time he falters.
The narrative weaves you in and makes you sympathise with Sheldon. But, does it, at any point, make you put yourself in his shoes?
If Sheldon is the outsider, are we celebrating him and telling ourselves that it is okay to be so. Or are we constantly trying to integrate him with normalcy?
The grappling nerd can be entertaining. Can he be emancipating to every one out there who feels like an outsider?
Against a backdrop of rugged mountainous terrain, the nine-year-old stands tall, his slick hair brushed to one side, chin held up with a tinge of adamance. He wears a bow-tie, carries a suitcase in hand, and ushers in the opening credits with a flash of extravagance.
The little boy is the outsider. And shall remain so, years from now.
The precocious nine-year old has an inability to pick up social cues.
He is a tightly-wound ball of convictions that are set in stone. The nine-year-old is a prodigy who’s skipped grades, probably read more books than the average 20-year-old Texan, and has as much difficulty reconciling ‘’science’’ with ‘’religion’’’ as he does making friends. He is forthright, plays by the book, and is clueless about social etiquettes that would require one to call friends over for dinner.
George Cooper Jr, Sheldon’s older brother, and Missy Cooper, Sheldon’s twin, draw the perfect outline around Sheldon’s quirks. You know what lies on the other side. They take the household irregularities in stride and munch them down with Coke and french fries. Or are, at least, made to.
The show doesn’t bear the burden of character establishment. The Big Bang has already done that. What you get are younger versions of the characters, while you are drawn into the everydayness of their lives.
Ian Armitage pulls off a young Sheldon Cooper to the T and keeps you asking for more.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)
Published: 25 Nov 2017,10:37 AM IST