Bollypedia

An awarded love story of the sophisticated elderly middle-class family couple. Good to watch and worth spending time with few gags and some important questions to ask ourselves while watching it.  Everything is good in the movie, it is just, it is not commercial. Watch it, if you have time and money to spare, but this is a good watch at home on digital platforms. 

Nikhil
The Times of India
The film has an impactful start, the kind that makes you sit back and ponder. The content, at least for the first part, is very relatable and its execution shows the plight of any woman who suffers in silence in a loveless marriage. The screenplay begins to go haywire after the interval, when the once stubborn Yashwant Batra resolves to win his wife back. The tactics that he resorts to are clichéd and that takes away from the impact of the film. The parallel love story of Firoz (Pankaj Tripathi) and Suman, which also serves as an underlying theme in this story, is interesting but gets an abrupt end. Ekavali Khanna as an aloof and withdrawn persona has done complete justice to the role of a docile and demure small-town Indian homemaker. Sanjay Mishra, too, has played his part of a male chauvinist, control freak aptly. Pankaj Tripathi, Anshuman Jha, Brijendra Kala and Shivani Raghuvanshi have done their roles well too. The problem is not with acting or cinematography, it is the script that makes what could have been an exceptional tale of loss of love, a run-of-the-mill Bollywood masala flick.
Pallabi Dey Purkayastha
Angrezi Mein Kehta Hain
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