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‘UnIndian’
- Updated: August 20, 2016
‘UnIndian’
U/A; Comedy/Drama/Romance
Director: Anupam Sharma
Cast: Brett Lee, Tannishtha Chatterjee, Supriya Pathak, Akash Khurana, Arka Das, Maya Sathi, Adam Dunn
Rating:
A still from ‘UnIndian’
Meera (Tannishtha Chatterjee), a divorcee and singular mom of Smitha (Maya Sathi), is an Australian of Indian origin. She is intelligent and independent, even so, she is underneath critical family vigour to find a good Indian match. Meera is not too penetrating about that. Especially after her relatives harmonise meetings with Samir (Nicholas Brown), an repulsive yet rich cardiologist. Then she meets Will (Brett Lee), and hesitantly falls in adore with him. But her family (Supriya Pathak Akash Khurana) are not expected to take pleasantly to that shameful affront. The dispute here is about not being Australian adequate or Indian enough.
This is a initial plan of a Australia India Film Fund, with initial time executive Anupam Sharma perplexing out a cranky informative rom-com scripted by Thushy Sathi – that appears to be a small too out of date in today’s context. The film though, has a light-weight feel to it with themes trimming from a village network that protects a own, Aussie English lessons, organised marriages and how to date an Indian Girl fluffing adult a storyline.
Cricketer Brett Lee, in his entrance behaving role, does a decent pursuit personification Will, a easy-going cricket and netball-loving UNSW teacher. Will’s flatmate, Arka Das as TK, an ungodly cooking fan and his constantly-eating, overweight friend, Adam Dunn as Mich move on a few laughs too. Tannishtha, Supriya and Akash are efficient enough. Shades of Bollywood quiver via a account and a Sydney backdrop looks same to a travelogue. This is not meant to be critical stuff. It’s a harmless, pretty beguiling tour if you’re not awaiting too most from it!
Watch a trailer of ‘UnIndian’