Average Rating : 3.4
Dum Laga Ke Haisha Movie Review | |
Review By : Saibal Chatterjee Rating : 3.5/5 Site : NDTV | Produced by Band Baaja Baaraat director Maneesh Sharma and presented by YRF's Aditya Chopra, the film tells a slice-of-life love story that is exceptionally unconventional, and not simply because of the heroine's body type. Visit Site For Full Review |
Review By : Akshay Kaushal Rating : NA Site : CNN-IBN | Though YRF didn't promote this movie the way they promote their other projects, it seems it will spread by word-of-mouth publicity. The trailer suggests that 'Dum Laga Ke Haisha' is going to be an interesting movie. Visit Site For Full Review |
Review By : Bollywood Hungama Rating : 3/5 Site : Bollywood Hungama | The film (set in circa 1995 in Haridwar), starts off with a self introduction of a neither qualified nor talented Prem (Ayushmann Khurrana), a high-school dropout and a die-hard Kumar Sanu fan. He confesses that he has only three weaknesses in his life: exam's English question paper, his father's slippers and Kumar Sanu's melodious voice. This eventually leads to his matrimony meet, where his parents meet the parents of the 'B.Ed graduate but fat' Sandhya (debutante Bhumi Pednekar), who wants to become a teacher. Visit Site For Full Review |
Review By : Joginder Tuteja Rating : 3/5 Site : Rediff | Anu Malik, who is scoring for a major production house (Yash Raj Films) after some time, does not disappoint. The lyrics are by Varun Grover. Visit Site For Full Review |
Review By : Surabhi Redkar Rating : 4/5 Site : Koimoi | Surprisingly, YRF’s most honest film amongst the recent times. It is a great script filled with nostalgia for those who have grown up in the bygone era of 80s and 90s. There is incredible detailing of characters and it is enough to find an instant connect. Visit Site For Full Review |
Review By : Shubhra Gupta Rating : 3.5/5 Site : Indian Express | Insecure young fellow Prem Prakash Tiwari (Ayushmann Khurrana) is a perfect candidate for the kind of ‘rapid-speaking’ English coaching classes, the ads which you find plastered on walls in small towns and ‘kasbas’. He’s called ‘Lapoo': it could well have been ‘Lalloo’, because that’s what Prem comes across as, as he ricochets between his overbearing father (Sanjay Mishra), his annoying ‘shakha pradhaan’, and his pals. Visit Site For Full Review |
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