Yaara Movie Review - Vidyut Jammwal, Shruti Haasan


Yaara Movie Review - Vidyut Jammwal, Shruti Haasan - Here is the review of the new hindi film by top critics. It is directed by Tigmanshu Dhulia. The movie released on 30th July on OTT Platform Zee5.

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Koimoi.com
By Pooja Darade (2/5)
It's a story of 4 friends - Phagun (Vidyut Jammwal), Mitwa (Amit Sadh), Rizwan (Vijay Varma), and Bahadur (Kenny Basumatary). They are childhood friends who meet each other after an unfortunate tragedy takes place. From childhood to their youth, they work together for Chaukdi Gang. It's during the 70s they become friends, goons and commit crimes together. However, something happens that changes their lives forever.
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FilmFare
By Devesh Sharma (2.5/5)
Phagun (Vidyut Jammwal), Mitwa (Amit Sadh), Rizwan (Vijay Varma) and Bahadur (Kenny Basumatary) are four best friends who are also notorious criminals. The film chronicles their lives over a period of twenty years, from 1977 to 1997 to be exact. Actually, we see them much before that, as children, when they are smuggling gold and pot in Nepal.
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Firstpost.com
By Anna M.M. Vetticad (1.5/5)
Everyone has an off day, I guess. Respected filmmakers are no exception. Having seen writer-director-producer Tigmanshu Dhulia's earlier works, most especially Haasil, Saheb Biwi aur Gangster1 and 2 and Paan Singh Tomar, it is hard to believe that he also made this film. There is no denying though that Yaara - flimsy of script and fleeting in effect - is Dhulia's latest venture.
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The Indian Express
By Shubhra Gupta (2/5)
Friendship and betrayal is a long-running thread in Tigmanshu Dhulia's films. Yaara, based on the 2011 French crime drama A Gang Story, gives us the story of four childhood pals and their journey through the murky world of gun-running, country liquor, and the shenanigans involved in buying and selling large tracts of land for profit.
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Intoday.in
By Jyoti Kanyal (2.5/5)
A friendship that has its foundation set in the late 1950s sustains the test of time. Yaara promises to tell that story. Essentially, Yaara is the story of four friends who leave no stones unturned to help each other. Just like other Tigmanshu Dhulia films, this film too treads back and forth between friendship and betrayal, but in a rather slow pace, which plays a spoilsport.
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Glamsham.com
By Vishal Verma (1/5)
Fagun (Vidyut Jamwal) and Mithwa (Amit Sadh) are childhood friends. A personal tragedy transports them to borders of India-Nepal courtesy Chaman (Sanjay Mishra) and they become the youngest members of a gang. Fagun and Mithwa form a team with two other boys from the gang Rizwan (Vijay Varma) and Bahadur (Kenny Basumatari).
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Ndtv.com
By Saibal Chatterjee (2/5)
A beefy Vidyut Jammwal and a brooding Amit Sadh, playing the two male leads, are called upon to put in the hard yards in a film that never quite gets off the ground. Written and directed by Tigmanshu Dhulia, Yaara straddles five decades - from the early 1950s to the late 1990s - and yet seems caught in a time warp.
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