332 Mumbai To India Movie Reviews
2.0
Nikhat Kazmi | Times of India
You actually want to sympathise with this film maker. Mahesh Pandey wanted to make a serious film on a serious issue but ironically all you get to hear a string of endless beeps, as the censor board seems to have snipped off every word that pertains to the issue and could have angered certain sections, according to it. So what if the film is ostensibly trying to talk about national integration and takes a stand against all kinds of divisive caste and regional politics.Read full review1.5
Taran Adarsh | bollywoodhungama.com
More and more film-makers are borrowing stories from real life. Giving shape to stories or incidents they believe in. Stories that provoke thinking and divert your attention towards issues that we otherwise brush aside. Director Mahesh Pandey's 332 - MUMBAI TO INDIA attempts to chronicle an incident that occurred almost two years ago in Mumbai. But let me clarify at the outset that 332 - MUMBAI TO INDIA is not a documentary on Rahul RajRead full review1.0
Mayank Shekhar | Hindustan Times
The nation's PM is Sikh, the president Maharashtrian, the woman running the country is beep female. Eh? You’ve to give it to the Censor Board for placing a beep at that point. It certainly adds to the humour. You're not sure what blasphemous word the censors blocked out: Italian-born, foreign-born. You laugh nonetheless. To be fair in this film, they’ve in parts beeped on “Marathi”, “Bihari”, “Bhaiya” (common slang for those from UP in Mumbai)Read full review1.0
Renuka Rao | DNA India
Like A Wednesday and Mumbai Meri Jaan, 332 Mumbai to India strives to capture the essence of Mumbai and the impact upon it of communal disharmony and terrorist strikes. Only, this film sends out a clichéd message — nationalism comes before regionalism. The film is based on a true incident, with doses of fiction creeping in now and then. It deals with the issue of the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena’s campaign more than two years ago against North Indians.Read full review0.5
Minty Tejpal | Mumbai Mirror
332 Mumbai to India, a clunky title that is difficult to decipher, a terrible film, badly written, acted, edited, directed and produced. Based on a real incident in Mumbai two years ago, the film raises the pertinent question who does the city of Mumbai belong to? But the manner of its telling is very trite and it’s a wonder that this parochial film has made it to the theatres. The film is set in 2008 and follows five different stock stories; all of them are quite badRead full review