May 15, 2018 10:02 AM
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Hi friends,
"HOPE AUR HUM" is a Hindi family drama movie directed by Sudip Bandyopadhyay and starred by Naseeruddin Shah, Sonali Kulkarni, Beena Banerjee, Naveen Kasturia and Kabir Shaikh.
Plot:
A maturing widower can't relinquish his obsolete photocopy machine, which possesses excessively space and separates always, prompting contact in his family.
Performance and Cinematography:
Giving up is intense, be it with individuals or with things. For Nagesh Shrivastav(Naseeruddin Shah), it is relatively incomprehensible when the time has come to dispose of the steadfast old photocopy machine that has served him well for a considerable length of time. Mr. Sonnichsen, as he calls the machine, is the main connect to his heavenly past as a copier for clergymen and officials. His oldest child Neeraj(Aamir Bashir), who is perpetually pursuing the subtle advancement at work, nearly comprehends why, yet for Neeraj's significant other, common sense supersedes sentimentality. The machine involves space that their girl could use as an examination room. The special case who truly comprehends Nagesh's quandary is his most youthful grandkid Anu(Kabir Sajid), a cricket-cherishing and editorial gushing child who is always onto the following insidiousness. At the point when Nagesh's more youthful child Nitin(Naveen Kasturia) who works in Dubai, appears with a best in the class scanner, Nagesh needs to grapple with resigning the machine, which has nearly turned into a companion.
A few sub-stories has gone through'Expectation Aur Murmur', all of which manage topics of old versus new, giving fate a chance to take its own course and even the more genuine ones that arrangement with blame and demise. The whole fragment where little Anu battles an internal fight around a demonstration of his that could have genuine repercussions is indicated perfectly by the movie producer and the youthful performer Kabir. Somewhere elsewhere the film scores well is the throwing, which helps make it significantly more reasonable and the characters relatable. The exchanges, as well, make you laugh out loud from time to time, which help in light of the fact that the film fiddles regularly with philosophical subjects. While the philosophizing doesn't get too overwhelming, towards the end one feels there could have been a superior, more layered result as opposed to the basic one that is served. The film is additionally fascinating in parts, while the entire feel somewhat disconnected. A more tightly content could have helped, however for the time being the little stiflers in the film work fine and dandy.