The most tried and tested formula of Indian cinema where a poor guy falls for the daughter of a rich father and the conflict starts in the plot. The only difference being it is presented in the most unconvincing manner. The problem doesn't end here for the cast and the crew of the movie. With very little promotion before release this is one of those movie which has no takers. It is quite another story that the movie would have bombed even with Bollywood like promotion.
Debutante director Arup De who has himself penned the story tries to tell the the tale of true love with a plot which has been tried too many times to be successful again. This plot would have worked a few decades earlier but the audience has moved on. If the plot is poor the screenplay is even worst with too many loose ends which don't seem to link up into a story. A few song and dance sequence cannot guarantee success any more in the industry.
The story is set in the past. Artist Nilabho (Manoj Ojha) falls for Jhilmil (Arpita Mukherjee), both of whom are studying in the same college. But Jhilmil"s industrialist father, played by Biswajit Chakraborty, doesn't approve of the relationship and wants to get Nilabho out of his daughter"s life. Nilabho paints Jhilmil's portrati in love but the emotion is one sided. Jhilmil marries her dad"s friend"s son)and flies off to foreign shores. Nilabho who is heartbroken, tries to commit suicide, but is saved by Urmi (Sudipta Banerjee). She tries to bring back Nilabho to life and slowly falls for him.
The performance of the stars is nothing worth writing about and it has too much of melodrama to seem like a convincing movie. Kalyan Sen Barat's music is perhaps the only thing which will prevent the audience from leaving the theatres during interval. A complete dud not worth visiting a theatre for.
Debutante director Arup De who has himself penned the story tries to tell the the tale of true love with a plot which has been tried too many times to be successful again. This plot would have worked a few decades earlier but the audience has moved on. If the plot is poor the screenplay is even worst with too many loose ends which don't seem to link up into a story. A few song and dance sequence cannot guarantee success any more in the industry.
The story is set in the past. Artist Nilabho (Manoj Ojha) falls for Jhilmil (Arpita Mukherjee), both of whom are studying in the same college. But Jhilmil"s industrialist father, played by Biswajit Chakraborty, doesn't approve of the relationship and wants to get Nilabho out of his daughter"s life. Nilabho paints Jhilmil's portrati in love but the emotion is one sided. Jhilmil marries her dad"s friend"s son)and flies off to foreign shores. Nilabho who is heartbroken, tries to commit suicide, but is saved by Urmi (Sudipta Banerjee). She tries to bring back Nilabho to life and slowly falls for him.
The performance of the stars is nothing worth writing about and it has too much of melodrama to seem like a convincing movie. Kalyan Sen Barat's music is perhaps the only thing which will prevent the audience from leaving the theatres during interval. A complete dud not worth visiting a theatre for.




















