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In an era of movies being expected to have a huge opening weekend, Tumhari Sulu is a nice breath of fresh air. A lower budget movie with an unknown cast that only opened in the 2500 screens across India – it relies on word-of-mouth and brilliant marketing – Tumhari Sulu made an astounding Rs. 11 crores in its first 4 days of release. However, what sets this movie apart from all others is the way it showed the many faces of womanhood – from a widow who dreams big to a single mother trying her very best for her child’s future; from those who find love and those who don’t; those living as independent women and those wanting children too. It touched upon issues such as surrogacy and the right to love, and was one of the first Bollywood movies to show a woman going out to work – a TV news anchor – without making her a superwoman. The movie is about Sulu – an ordinary woman who believes in the power of hard work and good heart. She believes in what she has been doing all her life – helping others, no matter who they are or how difficult their situations are. Her good deeds end up landing her in trouble when she accidentally becomes part of a kidnapping plot which she comes to rescue from inadvertently. In the process, she falls for the kidnapper’s son who is looking for nothing but his father’s love. The movie received mixed to positive reviews from critics, who praised the story and the cast. Rajeev Masand of CNN-IBN gave the movie a one and a half star rating, writing: One of the things I like about "Tumhari Sulu" is that it's not afraid to be funny. Well, it's not afraid to make its heroines funny either when they're in trouble or when they're being forced into shape. In his review for The Hindu, Sreedhar Pillai calls it a good film with "an interesting premise" but "stumbles" in execution because of weak dialogues and execution. Rachit Gupta of Filmfare commended the cast and technical aspects of the film, writing: "Tumhari Sulu" is a film we can all relate to. The narrative is honest and open — the screenplay never tries to surprise you with its twists. Albeit predictable, it is not monotonous in its execution and that’s where it succeeds. A simple story told in a simple manner but there’s nothing simple about his film’s thematic. And when dealing with such thematics, simplicity goes a long way. Anupama Chopra gave the movie 3 stars out of 5 in her review for Hindustan Times , writing: Tumhari Sulu doesn’t go the full hog when it comes to its strange premise. It doesn’t take us into Sulu’s womb or into flashback territory or deal with the aftermath of her ‘kidnapping’. We never find out how long Chinna kidnaps Sulu for, but I presume it’s a matter of days. 89cfa1e7782020
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