Most of the cast delivers potent performances, elevating their character types. Lakshvir Saran’s Lucky, whose character could have been a bland audience surrogate, brings a quiet vulnerability to the role, which is precisely the kind of anchoring this show needed to be interesting. He often lends this vulnerability to other characters around him. His performance becomes a lens through which the other men in the show are filtered. Lukkhe benefits a great deal from having Lucky as the protagonist because it reveals the show’s heart as one about the power of softness in the midst of all the violence. The women, too, are centred in the story—Gurbaani, Sanno and Paddy all have their moments to shine; so does Ayesha Raza Mishra as Bhabhi, a playful female rural don with an army of women. It is easy for such shows to devolve into the very thing that they are supposedly critiquing, but this one knows how to treat its women. Other than Lucky, most of the men in the show fall at different points on the other side of the moral divide, with rapper King, in his acting debut, getting the flashier role of the mercurial rapper with a penchant for violence.