Artists: Irrfan Khan, Deepak Dobriyal, Radhika Madan, Kareena Kapoor, Kiku Sharda, Pankaj Tripathi, Ranveer Shorey, and Dimple Kapadia, etc. Director: Homi Adajania Movie Type: Comedy Drama Duration: 2 hours 10 minutes
Critic Review
Fans were eagerly awaiting the return of Irrfan Khan. Apparently, Irfan had been waiting for his fans since the time he started shooting for the film after being cured of a deadly disease like cancer. There is no doubt that Irfan gave his fans more than expected in this film and once again proved why he is called the able and effortless actor of this era.
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The story is that of Champak Bansal (Irrfan Khan), a settler in Udaipur who runs a sweet shop as the grandson of the well-known Ghasitaram Mithaiwale. After the death of his wife, his world revolves around his daughter Tarika (Radhika Madan). The daughter has a childhood dream to go to London.
Along with raising the daughter and running a sweet shop, she also has to fight name and property litigation in court along with her other Ghasitaram brothers. In these cases, his cousin brother Gopi (Deepak Dobriyal) remains the hero of his brother. Tariqa prepares to become a college topper to fulfill her dream of going to London with a graduate.
Finally comes the day when Tarika gets an opportunity to go to London for further studies. Champak Tariqa, who is an affectionately affectionate father to his daughter, walks with him to make his dreams a reality. Gopi also supports him in this journey, but after reaching London, the situation becomes something that Champak and Gopi had not even thought about.
In Irrfan Khan’s Hindi Medium, which came before the English medium, director Saket Chaudhary touched on the relevant subject of language-divided society, here director Homi Adajania went a few steps ahead with the charm of overseas through Young Generation as well as father- They are also seen investigating the daughter’s relationship.
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The first half of the film is very entertaining and gripping, but the story starts to drag in the second half. Many tracks and characters are entered after the intermission. The climax is a bit dramatic, which is already guessed. But Homi’s quality is that despite the comic element, he kept the film from being loud. He has woven the small-town mentality, colloquialism, and attire beautifully with the characters. The music of Sachin-Jigar and Tanishq Bagchi is average.
As long as Irfan stays on screen, he keeps you captivated by his body language, amazing comic timing, his Udaipur accent, and emotional scenes. His acting delivery is so amazing that you do not realize that he must have shot this film while recovering from a disease like cancer. Some of his scenes as a father turn his eyes moist.
Radhika Madan as a daughter has complemented Irfan in every way. The role of Radhika, a rebel, innocent, dreamer, and father-loving, has many layers, she has played it honestly. His chemistry as a father-daughter is very well established, while Deepak Dobriyal as a brother has introduced a strong jugalbandi with Irrfan.
Through his character, he makes a lot of fun. Kareena comes to the screen as soon as she comes from her strong screen presence, but she is wasted in two scenes. Pankaj Tripathi is remembered in small roles. Dimple Kapadia, Tilottama Shom, Ranvir Shorey, Kiku Sharda, etc. in supporting roles have played their part in a fun way.
Even after five decades of cinematic dominance, Amitabh Bachchan still faces the quiet terrors of the midnight hour. The man who epitomised alpha-masculinity for generations of moviegoers recently made an unexpected confession that shocked his millions of admirers. He continues to have restless nights, locked in a vicious circle of intense self-doubt and crushing work stress.
This revelation is a huge wake-up call for anyone who thinks of him as an invincible acting colossus. It demonstrates that the heavy weight of perfectionism never fully fades, no matter how much celebrity you achieve.
Table of Contents
The Haunting Midnight Echoes of Perfectionism
Imagine being a living legend and lying awake at 3 a.m. wondering if your previous performance was a complete failure. Bachchan admitted that he always repeats his sequences in his memory, haunted by the terrible feeling that they “could have been done better.”
This tremendous emotional sensitivity reveals a side of the megastar that the public has rarely seen. Onscreen, we witness the towering demeanour, booming baritone voice, and perfect delivery. But, behind closed doors, he suffers from the same paralysing fear that ordinary people face on a daily basis in the workplace.
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Why the Deepest Passion Breeds Internal Chaos
You might ask why a man who has won every major film award is so concerned about delivering a single sentence. True genius is rarely characterised by serenity of mind. For Bachchan, acting is more than a job; it is a sacred, consuming fire that demands flawless excellence every time.
When you care so deeply about your craft, every creative endeavour feels like a high-stakes bet on your entire legacy. This tremendous artistic drive is a two-edged blade that produces amazing art while completely destroying your mental serenity.
The Heavy Price of an Enduring Legacy
Living under the microscope of the public eye for fifty years has a catastrophic psychological impact. Every move Amitabh Bachchan makes is immediately analysed, criticised, or worshipped by countless millions of people.
That amount of tremendous expectation establishes a distinct, invisible prison of performance anxiety. The dreadful anxiety of disappointing his big audience keeps his thoughts racing long after the cameras stop rolling. It turns out that the view from the very top of the mountain is extremely lonely and filled with perpetual emotional danger.
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Normalizing the Silent Struggle with Mental Health
Bachchan has done an incredible amount to raise worldwide mental health awareness by publicly exposing his personal struggles with work stress. He has effectively removed the heavy veil of shame that typically surrounds the topic of anxiety, particularly among older generations.
If the ultimate “Angry Young Man” of Indian cinema can freely acknowledge to feeling inadequate, then everyone else has the right to be human as well. It is a welcome reminder that being overburdened by your commitments does not imply weakness.
The Relentless Creative Hunger That Never Sleeps
Finally, this severe self-doubt is the secret fuel that drives Amitabh Bachchan to labour continuously at an age when most people have retired. It’s a curious paradox: his severe inner agony serves as the driving reason behind his legendary longevity.
He refuses to rest on his past accomplishments or rely on his immense celebrity to get by. Every sleepless night reveals a man with the raw, eager heart of a novice. He remains gloriously, devastatingly uneasy about his work, which is precisely what makes him an everlasting force in film.