All pregnant women are a little crazy. The film seemed strange to me, to say the least. A strange topic for Indian cinema, and the execution of the idea is also ... inadequate. The film tells the story of the girl Anupa, who trusted her beloved boyfriend, became pregnant with him, and he, as usual, refused to marry her. It is a classic of the genre to refuse to marry. If everyone is going to marry their pregnant girls, what are the movies about? Naturally, the whole family of the girl rebelled against her child (well, not all, the father began to roll a barrel, and the women there did not have the right to vote at all), and Anupa decided (!) to leave, arrange her life and raise her child alone. The act is reckless, but worthy of respect. Reckless because she is a domestic girl, not adapted to life. Worthy of respect, because try something in such conditions, when the father presses to the fullest, society condemns and points with a finger. And the groom is a scoundrel. Fortunately, Anupa’s childhood friend Reina lived in Mumbai, a girl completely emancipated and independent. Anupa went to see her.
And somehow everything was very happy and quickly settled - Anupa was hired, she found new friends and met her love. Fairy tales, of course. I myself got a job pregnant and I know that employers will work and fall from fatigue, but pregnant women will not be hired. As far as friends are concerned, everything is less plausible. There are compassionate people in the world who care. What do we have, what is India? There are more good people than bad people. And not everyone rushes to immediately condemn a pregnant unmarried girl. In general, the company from Anupa picked up the original: Rayna Emancipe, two gay men, nice guys like that, Hari and Mickey, who help and support her in every way possible, and Professor Druv, who is beaten by students in his own college and who is very similar to Colin Firth in the Indian performance twenty years ago. A nice uncle, but not completely free from prejudice. The news of Anupa's pregnancy scares him at first, but his sympathy for her (I don't say love, this word is somehow inappropriate here) outweighs it. It's more compassion and compassion. Well, when he decides to marry her, I fell into a slump. And this is in India, the land of strict morals!! And even his family had nothing against it!!! I told you, fairy tales... But fairy tales are nice. They inspire hope that even in such cases, when all relatives and friends turn away from the girl, it can still be good.
Starring Tara Sharma was not particularly impressed. The emphasis was on the fact that she was always talking to her child - or rather, he was talking to her. This is not surprising, since all pregnant women communicate with their children in one way or another. Not with words, of course, but they feel them. I have two children and I know what I am talking about. That's not exactly surprising. Anup was sorry, you sympathize with her, but you could have squeezed more out of the role. I remember Tara from many films, everywhere she is the same - like a sack bruised. But for this role she did not have to play anything. Just was, like always. A little bit of wood.
The movie was a little unbelievable, but you can watch it. I was really confused by the birth scene. I remember for myself - you do not know anything and do not want anyone to hear you, and especially not see you in such moments, and then ran a whole crowd of sympathizers and supportive, and also Anupa asks that they all stay!!! or she is alone afraid... in general, of course. Maybe I’m not that smart...
My assessment: you can look out of curiosity ... but I will not reconsider.
8 out of 10