Tum Milo Toh Sahi Movie Review
Tum Milo Toh Sahi (Hindi)
Tum Milo To Sahi is a tale of ordinary people at different stages of life, who discover that ‘their roots have intertwined so inseparably that they have become one tree and not two!’ The film revolves around ‘art and fortunate accident’ happens to three different couples at three different stages of life – late teens, mid thirties and late fifties. The three couples either in the ‘breathlessness of being in love’ or missing ‘that excitement’. Wherever they may be to begin with, the journey of life makes them discover true love – that which is left over, when ‘being in love’ has burned away. Tum Milo To Sahi is a look at how that love makes the lives of these ordinary people, extra-ordinary!
They (Nana Patekar and Dimple Kapadia) also display moments of quietly lived-in grace. That’s more than what you can say about the film they’re trapped in, a crisscross of lives converging on a depressingly drawn-out courtroom proceeding
Read moreI think the attempt here was a bitter-sweet love letter to Mumbai and its people but the film is fatally undone by the clumsy writing. The screenplay is static and the dialogue, superbly low IQ
Read moreBut the film tries too hard to give importance to all the characters. And hence fails to bring out the main story effectively
Read moreIf there's anything more infuriating than the acting in this film, it's the distracting background score that qualifies as sheer noise. This film is intended as a warm drama about love in a big city, but the script never quite gets around to achieving that
Read moreThe delicacy of the subject is certainly there on the screenplay. You can’t sense it on the screen
Read moreTum Milo Toh Sahi starts as a simple story but for the first half hangs aimlessly like people whiling away in a coffee shop. The second half is too slow and too many songs only slacken the pace
Read moreIt's not just the basic premise that is flawed. There has been a zero attempt towards authenticating the script
Read moreWatch it for the veterans' winsome act, the spirit of Mumbai and for a tale told well
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