A Still From The Movie Pihu
The burning iron, the trapping in the refrigerator, the leaning over a balcony and so much more around this toddler Myra Vishwakarma (in title role), who can teach a lesson or two to many of the established glamorous names (even though a lot of her portions are extracted from raw footage), makes your heart literally (almost) stop on several occasions. What stands out is that when her dad and the neighbours eventually break the door open, you are only concerned that Pihu survives; you have no inclination left to know their discord story but it's only the child's welfare you are concerned about. So yeah, whether she does or not, is not my style to tell you as that would amount to a huge spoiler. But despite the high tension predominantly present in most scenes, what also stands out is that there is a certain kind of repetition which tends to act as a slight deterrent. Real-life situations can get repetitive if depicted in real time, but I would say that those are the situations which are mundane and not the unusual, edgy ones as in this case. The long and short of this very well-made film is that it could have been at least 25-30 minutes shorter.
A Still From Pihu
Vinod Kapri (director) has done a praiseworthy job and once again in 2018, you have some very good content. Formula films are falling by the wayside, and it's time for Bollywood fraternity to realise that a huge monotony and over-budgeting has set in which are the two main reasons why the losses are exceeding the gains. Kapri said in an interview that 'every film should have a message'. I think I have mentioned his film's message, even though it may have got driven by default.
I am going with THREE-and-HALF.
Image Source: youtube/rsvpmovies
Image Source: youtube/rsvpmovies