Movie Name :
Kya Meri Sonam Gupta Bewafa Hai
(2021)
STORY :
At the point when Sintoo (Jassie Gill) is left between a rock and a hard place by his first love Sonam (Surbhi Jyoti), he writes his disappointment on cash notes. The notes become viral, setting off a chain of occasions in the existences of Sintoo and Sonam that reach from strange to incredibly arbitrary.
REVIEW :
The Rs.10 cash note bearing the line 'Sonam Gupta Bewafa Hai' became viral and feed for images on the web, a couple of years back. The unusual pattern likewise hit features the country over, as everybody pondered, who precisely is Sonam Gupta and what prompted this searing allegation, maybe, by an abandoned sweetheart. Essayist chief Ssaurabh Tyagi attempts to benefit from this viral sensation by weaving an anecdotal story around it. This endeavor to mix an undeniable story around only one popular line is entirely constrained, to the point that it shows in each casing of this disintegrating film. Tyagi's story is established in Uttar Pradesh's humble community with peculiar and uproarious characters that address the heap banalities of the regular 'humble community thinking.' Among numerous different things, the film likewise lectures how one should plan for an impressive future to turn out to be huge.
Sintoo, as pretty much every other random youth of the town is shocked with Sonam Gupta, who is reckless, entitled, lively and way out of his association. At the point when she tricks him and vanishes, crap hits the fan and Sintoo gets an inconsiderate rude awakening. For the main hour or thereabouts, the film in a real sense moves around aimlessly attempting to the set the reason so the film's title can be some way or another fitted into the plot. The main fun one can have here is watch the unconventionality of the characters and the unassuming non-metropolitan setting. It's a sheer joy to watch the late veteran entertainer Surekha Sikri ace her art for one final time. The film's saint Jassie Gill is appropriately given a role as the artless Sintoo, who is spoiled by his preposterous mother and flanked by futile companions. In spite of the undeniable blemishes in the composition, Jassie makes Sintoo adorable and simple to pull for. Likewise for Surbhi Jyoti, who plays the perplexing and indiscernible person of Sonam with certainty and energy. Like most such movies, there is a great deal riding on character entertainers also and Tyagi gets a few experts to do the work. This incorporates Atul Srivastava, Vibha Chhibber and Bijendra Kala. Vijay Raaz is disappointingly dreary.
Yet, these entertainers are in assistance of an incredibly frail content that attempts to handle such a large number of issues, frequently leaving unexplained openings in the account. Also, the most serious issue is that the film is pitched as a satire, yet isn't least piece interesting. The music is totally normal. 'Kya Meri Sonam Gupta Bewafa Hai?' appears to have been conceived out of a one-line thought that stretches on for more than two hours for certain respectable exhibitions as the main redeeming quality.