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Posted: 7 years ago
#41

Tu Hai Mera Sunday movie review: This Barun Sobti and Shahana Goswami starrer is a lovely slice-of-life film

Tu Hai Mera Sunday movie review: Arjun (Barun Sobti) is a charmer who has chucked the fast track corporate maze to explore other ways, and whose chance encounter with a shaky old man (Shiv Subramanyam) and his attractive daughter Kavi (Shahana Goswami) gets this thing rolling.

Written by Shalini Langer | New Delhi | Updated: October 5, 2017 2:50 pm
tu hai mera sunday movie review, tu hai mera sunday review, tu hai mera sunday star rating, tu hai mera sunday film ratingTu Hai Mera Sunday movie review: The strength of the film is in its writing, intensely rooted and real.

Tu Hai Mera Sunday movie cast: Barun Sobti, Shahana Goswami, Vishal Malhotra, Avinash Tiwary, Rasika Duggal, Nakul Bhalla, Maanvi Gagroo, Jay Upadhyay, Shiv Subramaniam
Tu Hai Mera Sunday movie director: Milind Dhaimade
Tu Hai Mera Sunday rating: Three and a half stars

A bunch of football enthusiasts get together for a Sunday game on Juhu beach in Mumbai. This one-line premise blossoms into a lovely slice-of-life film, which shines a light on Mumbai's diversity, and on how sport can become a unifier-cum-healing agent in the best way possible. It also tells us that there is always a way out, even if the problem looks insurmountable.

Arjun (Sobti) is a charmer who has chucked the fast track corporate maze to explore other ways, and whose chance encounter with a shaky old man (Subramanyam) and his attractive daughter Kavi (Goswami) gets this thing rolling.

Arjun and his pals, all of whom come from different backgrounds, as their names clearly suggestDominic, Rashid, Jayesh, Mehernoshlook forward to this Sunday ritual, as a way of de-stressing, letting their hair down, and just, you know, hanging.

The strength of the film is in its writing, intensely rooted and real. The characters have messy backstories and relationships, which gives them depth: Dominic's (Malhotra) harried mother has to deal with two permanently squabbling sons; Rashid (Tiwary) is a love-em-and-leave-em type who chances upon a potentially life-altering bright-eyed young woman (Duggal); Jayesh (Udadhyay) lives with his large, noisy Gujarati joint family; and Mehernosh (Bhalla) is a put-upon, increasingly-frustrated office drone till one day something snaps.

The detailing is spot on. Only in a few places does it feel a tad underlined, but on the whole, it is thoroughly good-natured. The ensemble cast plays well together, especially in the falling-in-like-and-something-more segments between Arjun and Kavi (why don't we see more of the talented Shahana?), and in the unlikely bonding between Rashid and the young mother of two energetic hearing-impaired boys.

Dhaimade is clearly skilled at creating life-like characters who feel as if they are people you could know, tics and all. Tu Hai Mera Sunday' is a feel-good, light-hearted yarn. And it comes at a time when that precious, vanishing spacemiddle-of-the-road and realistic, not too shiny or too drab but just rightneeds an urgent refill.

I guarantee you will leave smiling.

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Posted: 7 years ago
#42

Tu Hai Mera Sunday' Review: Small Film With a Big Heart

Suresh Mathew
Updated: 5 October, 2017 3:33 PM IST

Film: Tu Hai Mera Sunday
Director: Milind Dhaimade
Cast: Barun Sobti, Shahana Goswami, Vishal Malhotra, Maanvi Gagroo, Avinash Tiwary

Rating: 4 Quints out of 5

The first time I heard about Tu Hai Mera Sunday, was when I saw the poster of the film on my Twitter timeline. After a quick glance, I filed it away neatly in the "films I won't be seeing section in my mind. The title was random, the actors were unknown and the film had no "buzz around it. Then I came across the trailer - it seemed to be about a motley group of Mumbaikars who wanted to play football but couldn't find space for it. Again, not interested. But then, I heard a few positive reactions (not the regular air-kissing B-town variety), even Aamir Khan tweeted about loving the film and it piqued my interest enough to give it a try and I am so glad that I did.

Tu Hai Mera Sunday is a small film with an enormous heart which brings Mumbai to life and hooks you one scene at a time. Yes, the narrative revolves around a band of men who have no place to play their favourite game of football on a Sunday, but it's also about so much more.

The football gang from Tu Hai Mera Sunday.

While you can spot a few predictable tropes in the film (for eg the gang is made up guys from perfectly mixed religious backgrounds: there's Arjun - a Hindu, Dominic - a Christian, Rashid - a Muslim, Mehernosh - a Parsi and you have to have the quintessential Gujju businessman - Jayesh Bhai), it unfolds with a fair amount of unpredictability and quirkiness.

Writer-director Milind Dhaimade is in complete command over the story and its execution, showing a fine grip over the craft of storytelling. It's a buddy film, a rom-com and an emotional drama all wrapped in one, and all of it plays out smoothly without stepping on one another.

This indie film also boasts of all-round pitch perfect performances. While the main group of 5 guys played by Barun Sobti, Avinash Tiwary, Vishal Malhotra, Nakul Bhalla and Jay Upadhyay flounder and end up venting out their frustrations about living a stifled life in the city, the female characters, namely Shahana Goswami, Maanvi Gangroo and Rasika Duggal remain strong and anchored.

Tu Hai Mera Sunday also goes beyond the surface-level recording of slice-of-life feel good moments. In a memorable scene, when the group lands up in Goa to enjoy a weekend of football (which they can't in Mumbai), Mehernosh loses it and asks the gang why all of them are such escapists, why are you ready to accept things instead of putting up a fight and changing them? This episode comes unnervingly close to when several angry Mumbaikars are asking the same questions online after the tragedy at Elphinstone Road station.

A line in the film's song Thodi si jagah goes"Badi hai ghutan teri baahon mein, bas itni chhoot de ki saans chal sake... - it's a line that every true blue Mumbaikar lives by.

Charming, delightful, uplifting and entertaining all at once, Tu Hai Mera Sunday should be on your must-watch list this weekend.

Rating: 4 Quints out of 5

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Posted: 7 years ago
#43

Tu Hai Mera Sunday Movie review: This Barun Sobti, Shahana Goswami film is just what you can relate to

Tu Hai Mera Sunday Movie review: The story of the movie revolves around a group of five friends who are passionate about football.

By: FE Online | New Delhi | Published: October 5, 2017 4:14 PM
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Tu Hai Mera Sunday features Iss Pyaar Ko Kya Naam Doon' fame actor Barun Sobti and Rock On actress Shahana Goswami in the lead role. (Photo: Bollywood Hungama)

Tu Hai Mera Sunday Movie review: Director Milind Dhaimade's Tu Hai Mera Sunday features Iss Pyaar Ko Kya Naam Doon' fame actor Barun Sobti and Rock On actress Shahana Goswami in the lead role. The story of the movie revolves around a group of five friends who are passionate about football. Just like in real life when we face a hurdle and things around us are not good, the friends find themselves struggling to keep up with their lives when one day their favourite football adda is banned by the local welfare club. Along with Sobti and Goswami, the film also stars PK actress Maanvi Gagroo, Jannat actor Vishal Malhotra, 2 States actor Shivkumar Subramaniam, Jay Upadhyay, Nakul Bhalla, Rasika Dugal and Avinash Tiwari.

Tu Hai Mera Sunday is exactly what you want after a hectic day where you want to just relax and spend time with your loved ones watching something that is not over the top but is just something that you are able to relate to. The film showcases the life of 5 football fanatic friends who are based out of Mumbai and they get together every Sunday for a game on Juhu beach. The film shows how a sport becomes a unifier-cum-healing agent. And just as life is never fair, things take a turn for the worse and the friends are left struggling to keep everything together.

Barun Sobti plays the role of Arjun, who is a charmer, who is stuck in the fast track corporate maze and on his journey he encounters Kavi (role played by Shahana Goswami) and her father the shaky old man played by Shivkumar Subramaniam. As a ritual, Arujan is joined by 4 of his friends- Jayesh (Jay Upadhay), Rashid (Avinash Tiwari), Mehrosh (Nakul Bhalla) and Dominic (Vishal Malhotra), to de-stress with a game of football on the beach.

The detailing of the film is amazing, totally spot on. Tu Hai Mera Sunday' is likely to strike an emotional chord with its relatable content. The element of humor adds to the charm of the film with a few dramatic scenes thrown in-between. Nevertheless, the film is sure to leave you smiling in the end.

Rating- 3.0 stars

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Posted: 7 years ago
#44

Originally posted by: Sanguine..

Tu Hai Mera Sunday' Review: Small Film With a Big Heart

Suresh Mathew
Updated: 5 October, 2017 3:33 PM IST

Film: Tu Hai Mera Sunday
Director: Milind Dhaimade
Cast: Barun Sobti, Shahana Goswami, Vishal Malhotra, Maanvi Gagroo, Avinash Tiwary

Rating: 4 Quints out of 5

The first time I heard about Tu Hai Mera Sunday, was when I saw the poster of the film on my Twitter timeline. After a quick glance, I filed it away neatly in the "films I won't be seeing section in my mind. The title was random, the actors were unknown and the film had no "buzz around it. Then I came across the trailer - it seemed to be about a motley group of Mumbaikars who wanted to play football but couldn't find space for it. Again, not interested. But then, I heard a few positive reactions (not the regular air-kissing B-town variety), even Aamir Khan tweeted about loving the film and it piqued my interest enough to give it a try and I am so glad that I did.

Tu Hai Mera Sunday is a small film with an enormous heart which brings Mumbai to life and hooks you one scene at a time. Yes, the narrative revolves around a band of men who have no place to play their favourite game of football on a Sunday, but it's also about so much more.

The football gang from Tu Hai Mera Sunday.

While you can spot a few predictable tropes in the film (for eg the gang is made up guys from perfectly mixed religious backgrounds: there's Arjun - a Hindu, Dominic - a Christian, Rashid - a Muslim, Mehernosh - a Parsi and you have to have the quintessential Gujju businessman - Jayesh Bhai), it unfolds with a fair amount of unpredictability and quirkiness.

Writer-director Milind Dhaimade is in complete command over the story and its execution, showing a fine grip over the craft of storytelling. It's a buddy film, a rom-com and an emotional drama all wrapped in one, and all of it plays out smoothly without stepping on one another.

This indie film also boasts of all-round pitch perfect performances. While the main group of 5 guys played by Barun Sobti, Avinash Tiwary, Vishal Malhotra, Nakul Bhalla and Jay Upadhyay flounder and end up venting out their frustrations about living a stifled life in the city, the female characters, namely Shahana Goswami, Maanvi Gangroo and Rasika Duggal remain strong and anchored.

Tu Hai Mera Sunday also goes beyond the surface-level recording of slice-of-life feel good moments. In a memorable scene, when the group lands up in Goa to enjoy a weekend of football (which they can't in Mumbai), Mehernosh loses it and asks the gang why all of them are such escapists, why are you ready to accept things instead of putting up a fight and changing them? This episode comes unnervingly close to when several angry Mumbaikars are asking the same questions online after the tragedy at Elphinstone Road station.

A line in the film's song Thodi si jagah goes"Badi hai ghutan teri baahon mein, bas itni chhoot de ki saans chal sake... - it's a line that every true blue Mumbaikar lives by.

Charming, delightful, uplifting and entertaining all at once, Tu Hai Mera Sunday should be on your must-watch list this weekend.

Rating: 4 Quints out of 5


I loved this one. So honest.
From marking THMS from "Films I won't be watching" to recommending it "Should be on your must-watch list".
There lies the success of storytelling, direction, and actors. Changing a neutral's opinion. ⭐️
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Posted: 7 years ago
#45

Tu Hai Mera Sunday Movie Review: Barun Sobti's Film Abounds In Characters That We Can Relate To

Tu Hai Mera Sunday Movie Review: Tu Hai Mera Sunday Movie Review: Don't wait for Sunday, watch Barun Sobti's film right away and spread the word

Entertainment | Saibal Chatterjee | Updated: October 05, 2017 16:34 IST
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Tu Hai Mera Sunday Movie Review: Barun Sobti's Film Abounds In Characters That We Can Relate To

Tu Hai Mera Sunday Movie Review: Barun Sobti in a film's still (Courtesy: barunsobtisays)

Cast: Barun Sobti, Shahana Goswami, Pallavi Batra

Director: Milind Dhaimade

Rating: 3.5 Stars (Out of 5)

Breezy, ballsy and bracingly bare-bones, Tu Hai Mera Sunday, former adman Milind Dhaimade's maiden fiction feature, is an urban-alienation drama delivered with a vigorous and fresh spin. The film, speaking a language rooted in reality, draws a vibrant portrait of the diversity of suburban life in Mumbai even as it probes the many challenges that the middle class in a bustling city bursting at the seams has to face day in and day out.

Dhaimade isn't making any grand statement out here. All he does is attempt an approximation of the macro picture with the aid of diligently etched micro-narratives about a group of culturally disparate characters grappling with workaday stress and turmoil in a megalopolis that insinuates itself deep into the souls of its inhabitants.

In a broad sense, Tu Hai Mera Sunday is the story of five buddies looking for space in Mumbai to play football, a game that brings them together every Sunday. Juhu beach is their favoured playground until a minor mishap renders the place out of bounds. Housing society compounds chock-a-block with parked cars, rain drenched terraces and not-so-deserted lanes serve as alternative sites, but none of them has the potential to be permanent.


There is much more to this film than the passion for a sport or a quest for a physical location. As the multiple stories unfold over 126 minutes, football takes somewhat of a backseat and the film turns into a loose-limbed, nimble-footed exploration of the personal and professional dynamics that propel these moody men and the people in their lives towards their respective goalposts. It is a story of confused negotiations, all-0ut confrontations and unsettling meltdowns bookended by tentative urges on the one hand and bold, assertive, life-altering initiatives on the other.

The screenplay assembles characters that are real and places them in situations that are believable. The acting is so splendidly natural all around that it is easy to be swept up by the many-pronged tale that touches upon a slew of tangible problems ranging from urban angst and widening social fissures to shrinking space for recreation and rising workplace pressures.

Dhaimade's light touch makes Tu Hai Mera Sunday an easy watch. The film canters along at an even clip, evading ungainly plot lurches as it glides through the lives of the five football freaks thrown off by a ban on playing on Juhu beach.

The leader of the group of boys is the self-effacing Arjun Anand (Barun Sobti), a Nagpur guy who's been in Mumbai for 12 years. Having opted out of the corporate rat race in pursuit of happiness, he seeks self-fulfilment in the little joys of life. His 'nice guy' deportment helps him befriend Kavya Ranganathan (Shahana Goswami), a working woman whose Alzheimer's-afflicted father (Shiv Subrahmanyam) he volunteers to take care of when the lady works extra hours on an off-day. The old man, obviously a former sportsman, cannot contain his excitement when he sees a football.


Anand's growing proximity to Kavya's dad does not go down too well with his mates, especially the lonesome Rashid Sheikh (Avinash Tiwary), whose single-room tenement is a total mess, pretty much like his life, which lurches from one fling to another until a new neighbour (Rasika Dugal) moves into the building with her two sons.

The others, too, have to contend with their own set of day-to-day problems. Dominic (Vishal Malhotra), a ukulele-strumming Goan Christian boy, does not see eye to eye with his brother Dennis (Suhas Ahuja), a fact that upsets his mother no end. Mehernosh (Nakul Bhalla), a Parsi accountant saddled with an obnoxiously overbearing boss. His vents his ire by sending abusive letters to the hectoring honcho. And Jayesh (Jay Upadhyay), a Gujarati stockbroker and father of two raucous children, is stuck with an extended family that never leaves him alone.

The back stories of these men, revealed in small tranches, complete a picture that tells us a great deal about the sort of Mumbai lives that we have rarely seen on the big screen since the heydays of the middle-of-the-road cinema popularized by the likes of Basu Chatterjee, Hrishikesh Mukherjee and Sai Paranjpye.

The performances in Tu Hai Mera Sunday are the icing on the cake. All the actors, even those that get no more than a couple of scenes, leave an indelible mark on the film. A couple of them, Avinash Tiwary and Nakul Bhalla, are called upon to anchor highly dramatic scenes that run counter to the generally subdued tone of the film, but they prove equal to the task.

Barun Sobti etches out with empathy a young man who is acutely aware of his weaknesses and strengths. As the woman who helps him move towards a semblance of clarity, Shahana Goswami registers a luminous presence. It is a mystery why this gifted actress isn't more visible than Bollywood allows her to be.

If there are a few blips along the way, they stem from the fact that the film is rather 'overcrowded' and a few of the characters inevitably get the short shrift. The most notable among them is the woman played with magnificent grace by Rasika Dugal. Like Rashid, her troubled neighbour desperate to get rid of a rampant rat in his room, this loner is disadvantaged on several counts: she is a Muslim, a single mother, and her two boys are both deaf-mutes. But she isn't the least bit bitter about her plight and is content to deal with each day as it comes.

Tu Hai Mera Sunday abounds in characters that we can relate to instantly. But it is this spirited woman - she is defined by her ability to smile her way through adversity - who stands out and leaves us wishing that there was more of her in this lovely little film about real people confronting real problems. But there isn't much else that the film lacks. It sets itself a modest target and achieves it without breaking a sweat. Don't wait for Sunday, watch Tu Hai Mera Sunday right away and spread the word.
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Posted: 7 years ago
#46
Eagerly waiting to watch it
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Posted: 7 years ago
#47

Tu Hai Mera Sunday Movie Review: The Holiday We Need

Starring Barun Sobti and Shahana Goswami, this film about the lack of space in Mumbai is elevated into a profound zone thanks to director Milind Dhaimade's understanding of fragile middle-class dynamics

Rahul Desai

October 5, 2017 | 24 Minutes Ago

FC Rating

Director: Milind Dhaimade

Cast: Barun Sobti, Shahana Goswami, Vishal Malhotra, Avinash Tiwary, Nakul Bhalla, Jay Upadhyay, Rasika Dugal, Maanvi Gagroo

There is not enough space in Mumbai for its people to notice their differences. One is the literal medium of space the matchbox flats, shackled schools, cramped streets, claustrophobic buses and trains, non-existent fields, overpopulated offices. Put enough humans into this horizontally challenged routine every day, and a desperate battle for survival becomes a "comfort zone of sorts. Which is why certain specifics the characters' choice of professions, for example aren't highlighted extensively in Tu Hai Mera Sunday. For better or worse, everyone is an equal on an overflowing station platform.

But it's the second kind of space that Milind Dhaimade's little film beautifully explores. A headspace that is rarely our own and one that is inextricably linked to the aforementioned physical struggle. In fact, being bogged down by the city feels like a proud badge of citizenship you are not a true Mumbaikar if you can breathe the air of normal civilization, or if you can breathe at all. Expectations are painfully modest: give us that free Sunday, a vague football/cricket ground and enough bodies, and a million Mondays become worth enduring.

Dhaimade's understanding of this city's fragile middle-class dynamics is what elevates his seemingly lighthearted film into a profound zone: take away that Sunday football session, and most of us have nowhere to hide

There is no time to choose these companions like thirsty prisoners on parole determined to make the most out of this legal day-long jailbreak. Cultural diversity and lifelong connections are merely accidental byproducts of this diminished lifestyle. For instance, except for old college buddies Arjun (Barun Sobti) and Rashid (Avinash Tiwary), the other three in the Sunday Juhu-football group Parsi bawa Mehernosh (Nakul Bhalla), Gujju bhai Jayesh (Jay Upadhyay) and Goan maakapao' Dominic (Vishal Malhotra) seem like ragtag additions who perhaps had nowhere else to go. They must have joined as strangers, one by one, without even noticing each other's surnames. The only religion they recognize is freedom. Their friendship is almost incidental and necessary, because it guarantees a shared escape from their torrid weeks.

ALSO READ: RAHUL DESAI'S REVIEW OF OUR SOULS AT NIGHT

But Dhaimade's understanding of this city's fragile middle-class dynamics is what elevates his seemingly lighthearted film into a profound zone: take away that Sunday football session, and most of us have nowhere to hide. The balance is that delicate. These characters whose introductions lull us into expecting a stereotypical, broad comedy are then forced to look inward and examine their own "lack of space.

After all, without a football it's just a bunch of running men unable to make sense of giant goalposts. Suddenly, their flaws are out in the open IIM-Berkeley Arjun's underachieving escape from corporate drudgery, Rashid's womanizing as a product of religious discrimination, Mehernosh's horrible office boss, Jayesh's crippling family responsibilities and resentful Domi's younger-sibling volatility.

Despite budgetary constraints, Dhamade effortlessly switches between the milieus of these narrative worlds. We see a bit of Delhi when Arjun's story unfolds, a bit of Hyderabad with Rashid, a bit of new Amdavad with Jayesh, a little of Konkan with Domi and some of old Gujarat with Mehernosh all of which cumulatively amounts to a typical snapshot of Bombay (translated areas: Lokhandwala, Mahim, Vile Parle, Orlem and Byculla). Each of them is designed to occupy a coming-of-age drama of their own, and except for an older Jayesh's case (he has no "real young-adult problems as such, which is why he internalizes theirs), it's a woman that disrupts their robotic despair.

And it's ironic that the device that triggers this existential domino effect is a character whose mind has long retired from this race. Shiv Subramaniam is fantastic as a dementia-afflicted old uncle. One can sense he is the lifelong "consequence of the stress-castles these five are currently occupying: a cautionary tale sent back in time to rescue those headed for his fate. Arjun immediately sympathizes with the lost man's condition (thereby becoming the "protagonist of the five) and true to the city's flexible spirit involves him in their beach game before returning him to his worried daughter (Shahana Goswami, as Kavya). "Uncle, a liability for most, becomes the unintentional cause of the group's fresh problems they are forced to exit their comfort zones and find new football spaces after being banned from the beach.

ALSO READ: RAHUL DESAI'S REVIEW OF CRD

But it was much more than just a Sunday game; it was an outlet for their frustrations, a pillow for their muffled screams. And, very appropriately, as the film progresses through their distinctive individual situations, we see four separate public meltdowns during four quintessentially "Mumbai activities at an office, airport, quarter bar and a Goa trip. These are essentially the four stages of life here: work, commute, drink, escape. But what's significant is the way the filmmaker handles these serious outbursts.

We've been conditioned to expect theatrical results (death, suicides, exile) from cinematic implosions; the sight of an unpredictable ticking-bomb character makes us expect the worst on screen. But this film treats the bouts of insanity for what they are a "moment. More often than not, this mood fizzles out, and the tension diffused by a lame joke or awkward banter. And life just goes on. If anything, the madness feels therapeutic.

Tu Hai Mera Sunday is what I'd call a feel-good tragedy. All of us are forced to accept and find some solace and silver linings in our abusive relationship with this city

Another example of mainstream subversion is the Arjun-Kavya equation. Treated like just another budding love story, its conflict is surprisingly mundane and lifelike the boy's shyness, the girl's impatience without any earth-shattering frills. In fact, the one time Arjun decides to act like a "film, inspired by his chanting buddies, he is unceremoniously shut down: akin to a hero being arrested at Security Check instead of stopping the heroine from boarding the airplane. This is peculiar to watch, but entirely relatable, given that it involves a whipped big-city heart unable to recognize a "moment if not surrounded by crisis and chaos.

ALSO READ: RAHUL DESAI'S REVIEW OF JUDWAA 2

All the actors deserve credit for the chemistry the share, not least because they occupy an orthodox storytelling template songs, emotions, laughter, road-trips, tears that could have so easily been generic Bollywood rather than Bombay.

Tu Hai Mera Sunday is what I'd call a feel-good tragedy. All of us are forced to accept and find some solace and silver linings in our abusive relationship with this city. And despite this not-so-lavish inevitability, it's amazing that a film like this, with resolutions so submissive, feels so very uplifting.

Maybe it's the easy accessibility, or the fact that even its littlest victories feel like grand romances. I felt immensely happy for some reason, even though it's basically about a bunch of people finding a new bunch of people to make their confines less restrictive. Their space, in a way, becomes even smaller. But it's also a little less lonely. And perhaps that's what cinema, irrespective of its form, really is: an absolute measure of intangible emotions.

Well-observed films like these are a reminder that even the most unremarkable stories can be as adaptive as the faces that inhabit their environments. All they need is a kick and the power to shift the goalposts.

Edited by Sanguine.. - 7 years ago
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#49

Movie Review: Tu Hai Mera Sunday Barun Sobti, Shahana Goswami

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Name of MovieTu Hai Mera Sunday
Critics Rating
DirectorHoward Rosemeyer
Star castBarun Sobti, Shahana Goswami, Pallavi Batra
GenreDrama/Comedy Film
Duration2 hours 04 Minutes
Date Release06 Oct 2017

Plot: The movie is a tale of five friends who seek respite from the troubles of their daily lives by playing football on the beach on Sundays. However, one day due to some reason the sport is banned on Juhu beach and they suddenly find them at a loss. And then the movie picks up the pace and shows how the crunch of recreational spaces (which is certainly a problem in metropolitan cities) becomes forms the crux of the movie.

Review: The movie completely belong to the Slice-of-life genre, which is difficult one to attempt as things can go downright boring if not done right, but Tu Hai Mera Sunday' makers pull it off quite efficiently. The movie features an ensemble cast and everyone makes sure to keep you engrossed to the movie in their own ways.

The movie starts with an introduction to the world of the five friends and their easy camaraderie is such a joy to watch. Arjun (Barun Sobti), Dominic (Vishal Malhotra), Rashid (Avinash Tiwari), Mehernosh (Nakul Bhalla) and Jayesh (Jay Upadhyay) all of them have a common love and it is football. Every week the five friends drag through the weekdays, waiting for the weekend to arrive so that they can get together and play Football.

We are also introduced to their families in quick succession and everything in the movie is at some point or the other is so relatable and real that you tend to get involved in the movie. But one fine day the place where they regularly chilled on Sunday's by playing a game of football together, is taken away from them, and the reason is a political angle. Then the five friends don't give up and try to find a space but in the alternative places for their Sunday game. But get only small society compounds with parked cars or building terraces. And all this rises to their pent-up frustrations, and breakdown and then they plan a Goa trip together where they finally come to terms with everything's that's wrong with their lives. And like every good break, it leaves them more whole, happy and content.

The acting by all the actors is worth appreciating and same goes for the direction of the movie, you feel a little dragged in between but later the pace evens out. The songs in the movie are good but miss on the lingering effect.

Why To Watch: We recommend the movie strongly. It will be a pleasant watch over the weekend and will give you an instant connect feeling. It will also make you think again over the futility of the rat race and will entertain you at the same time.

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Posted: 7 years ago
#50

Movie Review: Tu Hai Mera Sunday, Quite A Pleasant Surprise Packet

Khalid Mohamed
10133 mins
Barun Sobti makes a sudden impact with this reality bites entertainer directed by first-timer Milind Dhaimade
Tu Hai Mera Sunday Movie Review
three point five stars

Here's a msg to writer-director Milind Dhaimade: Would he stand up wherever he is and take a bow, right now?

Without any of those smarmy interviews and assaultive publicity campaigns, this first-timer has delivered one of the very few pleasant surprises of the year. And please don't let the title Tu Hai Mera Sunday put you off (I was initially, expecting this to be in the sexist genre of Pyaar ka Panchanama). For heaven's sake, what could this metaphorical description of a beloved one as a "Sunday, yield?

Gratifyingly, the cheesy title doesn't matter. Instead, this take on the wired lives of an ensemble of dudes -- in the tangled grid of a megapolis -- has something valid to say, and says it without going into the preachy zone which could have reduced this indie-spirited venture into a Football: Ek Nafrat Katha.

Why football? Simply because the sport offers a weekend diversion on Juhu beach here to a quintet of quirky guys, who toil away, and deal with miscellaneous hassles, most of their own making. But this is Mumbai, meri jaans. The city, which never snores, is resilient and yet restless.

a still from barun sobti upcoming movie
A Still From Tu Hai Mera Sunday

Over then to the Hum Paanch of the show who're unfairly deprived of their chill zone on the beach . One of the quintet's a corporate honcho who's disenchanted with the stifling after-effects of an MBA degree. Count among the rest, an overgrown-up sort still tied to his mother's apron strings; a love-em-and'-leave-em serial womaniser; an office boss hater (that makes most of us!); and a funny fella from a Gujarati family.


Uh huh, shoon kariye? The Gujjus' are stereotyped as the farsan chompers. Also, you do wonder why Dhaimade had to pick his gang from distinctly different faiths. The script contrives an Amar Akbar Anthonyish pack, with the addition of a Mehernosh bawa. Plus, it's gratuitously reiterated that Goa is the dream breakaway, hop over there, and dil chahta hai more. Tell us something, we don't already.

The escapist (literally) entertainer does have its flaws and cringe-inducing moments. Yet for the most part of its running time of two hours , it's unalloyed fun, as well as sharply observant of the strengths and foibles of the middle class. Not to expect a Hrishikesh Mukherjee or a Basu Chatterjee classic though. Dhaimade indicates a natural-born playful talent in sync with today's youth.

barun sobti and shahana goswami in tu hai mera sunday
Barun Sobti And Shahana Goswami In Tu Hai Mera Sunday

At points, the solo spotlight moments assigned to the football fanatics appear to marvellously improvised and off-the-cuff. Quite clearly the TV actor, Barun Sobti, is excellent, making you wonder why he hasn't yet been given his big-Bollywood-op yet. Shahana Goswami, seen after a hiatus, and Sobti spark cool chemistry.

Among this sunshine squad, do keep an eye out for the acting pyrotechnics of Avinash Tiwari, Maanvi Gagroo and especially, the comic timing of Jay Upadhyay.

Here's the go-to frolic, then, for the weekend. Or any day of the week.

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