Jai Mummy Di Review: An Exhausting Rom-Com (Rating: *)

Film: Jai Mummy Di

Cast: Poonam Dhillon, Sunny Singh Nijjar, Sonnalli Seygall, Supriya Pathak

Director: Navjot Gulati

Rating: *

Reviewer: George Sylex

What's About - After watching the teaser itself it was unmistakably sure that the lead cast, last observed together in Pyaar Ka Punchnama 2, didn't have the charm to control this film. The film's plot was entertaining enough - the matrons of two neighboring families in a Delhi region, the Khannas and the Bhallas is not happy with one another. So when their kids, Puneet (Sunny Singh) and Saanjh (Sonnalli Seygall), become love accomplices you can expect firecrackers.

Analysis - There are some entertaining minutes in the film, and they may have worked, in spite of a tangling plot. The screenplay trudges around with some unnecessary preoccupations. The end, when it shows up, feels nearly nothing and past the point of no return. There is additionally the inevitable uncover of the starting point story that prompted the contention, however it is just too senseless to even think about generating any laughs. Despite a 109-minute runtime, Jai Mummy Di appears long and is incredibly exhausting. I wish a few characters could act and some could stop by acting. The composing is poor in the film, and a few jokes are even written in awful taste.

Star Performances - Veterans like Poonam Dhillon, who plays Pinky Bhalla, and Supriya Pathak Kapur who papers Laali Kapoor are in the strong structure. Yet, unfortunately, the entirety of their drama squander in a movie that doesn't have strong content to stand on. Sunny Singh is as lost as he was in his last flick Ujda Chaman. He is stereotyping himself by doing such characters and it's not in the slightest degree a decent sign for an entertainer who could do truly well. Sonnalli Seygall disappointed badly. She looks excellent however, that is about it. She is either exaggerating or exaggerating, there's not a solitary scarce difference in the midst of it.

Direction & Music - Director Navjot Gulati, who makes his full-debut with this film, makes do with worn-out tropes to convey send his story. Navjot Gulati goes from terrible to more terrible as the story continues. He backed by a few entertaining exchanges and minutes. However, that doesn't work over the long haul by any means. Indeed, even at 105 minutes, the movie extended, and that is the greatest loss of Gulati. Songs are forgettable, aside from 'Mummy Nu Pasand', which is alright. Hitesh Sonik's score is engaging however it doesn't supplement the scenes.

Overall - Jai Mummy Di is a very bad film with bad direction and exhibitions. The film is a risky one for the watchers.

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About GeorgeSylex

Film Critic, Writer, Reviewer, Columnist

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