Bollypedia
A poor upper-caste man is jailed on suspicions of having assassinated the young chief minister of a fictional north Indian state. Please read the word “poor” here to mean not just impoverished but also “bechara”.
 
 
Well made, this kind of plot could lead to a solid crime thriller. The elements are all there but, as the story continues, there are certain things which may disturb you. The writing part of the movie is as strong as its casting. The direction might disappoint you a little bit. The constant flashbacks are not relatable. 
 
 
All the actors including Deepak Dobriyal in lead and Raima Sen as a lawyer have given an extraordinary and Jaw-dropping performance.In the end, movie well points out the casteism and other corrupted devil destroyers of the society. This movie is a food for thought for all the first world people.
Nikhil
The Indian Express

Well made, this kind of plot could lead to a solid crime thriller. The elements are all there: a man who starts off by selling vegetables and ends up manning a tiny ‘parchun ki dukaan’, being thwarted by all-round corruption, and suffering one blow after another. From Kuldip Patwal’s point of view, everyone who doesn’t let him go ahead is the enemy: from the lowly government official who refuses to open his file, to the chief minister whose entourage blocks the road, and leads to a tragedy. This bunch of actors can be a pleasure to watch: just Dobriyal and Devaiah are enough to raise an indifferent film. It’s not that they don’t try, but they are left floundering, the former as a fellow protesting his innocence, and the latter as his mustachioed defense lawyer. Raima Sen is used all wrong as the prosecutor-with-a-secret. And Pravin Dabas never overcomes his badly written character. Kuldip Patwal is a mess which never quite comes together, with both story and characters and dialogue meandering all over the place.

 

Shubhra Gupta
Kuldip Patwal - I Didnt Do It
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