Abhishek Sharma is back with a satire, and he loves being deliberately scatterbrained about it -- we know from his two 'Tere Bin Laden' films. Being goofy and caustic at the same time can be tricky business. While he sailed with 'Tere Bin Laden', he struggled with its follow-up, Tere Bin Laden: Dead And Alive.
Abhishek Sharma's latest is positioned as a rom-com meant to take a few jibes that are served purposely ditzy. In focus is Bombay of the nineties (which becomes Mumbai over the course of the story) as well as its locals-versus-outsiders conflict that had started gaining prominence in that era. The film also makes some noise about women and curbs on their freedom of choice, in career as well as marriage, which would often dictate many middle-class households of the era.
These are all subject that have been dealt with numerous times on the Bollywood screen.
Abhishek Sharma's latest is positioned as a rom-com meant to take a few jibes that are served purposely ditzy. In focus is Bombay of the nineties (which becomes Mumbai over the course of the story) as well as its locals-versus-outsiders conflict that had started gaining prominence in that era. The film also makes some noise about women and curbs on their freedom of choice, in career as well as marriage, which would often dictate many middle-class households of the era.
These are all subject that have been dealt with numerous times on the Bollywood screen.
- 11/13/2020
- by Glamsham Editorial
- GlamSham
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