Cargo (2019) is what they call blue collar science fiction: stories about guys in jumpsuits (and sometimes women in jumpsuits - Ellen Ripley is an exemplar of the type), in space, doing unglamorous work and dealing with isolation and the hostile nature of the void. Sometimes blue collar science fiction heroes have to deal with killer aliens or talking bombs, sometimes they have to save the last forest in existence, and sometimes they are forced to watch cheesy movies and try to keep their sanity with the help of their robot friends. And Cargo's jumpsuit clad working stiff is a rakshasa charged with managing the transition of human souls from one life to the next.
Prahastha (Vikrant Massey) has been alone on Pushpak 634A for a very long time, since shortly after the Human-Rakshasa peace treaty. He leads a very structured and simple life; he greets the human souls (the "cargo") that appear on Pushpak 634A, heals them, erases their memories and sends them on to the next life, and he writes (and does not send) long letters to his lost love Mandakini (Konkona Sen Sharma.) Life is simple. And then supervisor Nitigya (Nandu Madhav) informs him that he's been assigned an assistant.
Yuvishka (Shweta Tripathi) doesn't make a great first impression; she's trained in the latest procedures, rather than Prahastha's practiced techniques, and worse, she's a fan. But after a rocky start, the pair grow to respect and like one another, and start working together well. And then a meteor storm hits and everything starts going wrong.
And that's basically the plot. Which is okay; this movie is focused on character rather than action, and those characters mostly have long conversations. It's slow and sweet and deeply strange, as our all too human rakshasa protagonists marvel at the range of humanity, from an overly focused businessman to Ranchandra Negi (Biswapati Sarkar), the International Loneliness Detective.
While the International Loneliness Detective is only a very minor part of the plot, he does embody the movie's theme. Everybody is looking for a connection to the people around them, and I appreciate the fact that the movie does not limit itself to romantic connections. Yuvishka and Prahastha in particular have no romantic chemistry at all. Instead, they're friends, and the movie treats that friendship as something that is important and worth fighting for. In space, even a demon needs a friend sometimes.
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