Yeh Mera India YMI | |
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Directed by | N. Chandra |
Produced by | N. Chandra Dhaval Gada |
Starring | Anupam Kher Perizaad Zorabian Purab Kohli Rajpal Yadav Sarika Seema Biswas |
Music by | Suhas Siddharth Kavita Seth |
Distributed by | N Chandra Global Infotainment Ltd Pen India Pvt. Ltd. |
Release date(s) | 28 August 2009 |
Running time | 134 min. |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Yeh Mera India YMI (also named Y.M.I. Yeh Mera India) is a 2009 Hindi movie, written and directed by N. Chandra. The film stars Anupam Kher, Perizaad Zorabian, Purab Kohli, Rajpal Yadav, Sarika, and Seema Biswas.
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Yeh Mera India focuses on the comprehensive lifestyle of Mumbai, with a special focus on the biases that permeate the corner of its society. Whether it is communal bias, social bias, economic bias, religious bias or educational bias, the "bias" factor dominates the entire depiction of the film, merging different characters into one story.
The different biases that are incorporated into the film are as following:
Biases of these sort weave the entire story into finding resolutions based on the biases of individuals and the reality of the lifestyle of Mumbai. This movie plot has certain similarities with the plot of Crash (2004), an American movie starring Matt Dillon, Sandra Bullock, Don Cheadle, Thandie Newton and Brendan Fraser.[1]
Actor or actress | Role |
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Anupam Kher | Mr.Kaur |
Atul Kulkarni | Raja |
Milind Gunaji | Don Ashfaq |
Perizaad Zorabian | Jennifer Ali |
Purab Kohli | Nachiket Joshi |
Smily Suri | Asha Ambedkar |
Parvin Dabbas | Sameer Ali |
Rajit Kapoor | Arun Talweja |
Rajpal Yadav | Bhola Paswan |
Sarika | Sushma Talweja |
Sayaji Shinde | Chandrakant Shinde |
Seema Biswas | Sharda Bai |
Vijay Raaz | Noor |
Ashwin Mushran | Amarjit Singh |
Virendra Saxena | |
Siddhant Karnick | Jatin Gunguly |
Ehsaan Khan |
Yeh Mera India received mixed reviews from critics. Rajeev Masand said in his review that "the acting's embarrassingly weak and the scenarios all exaggerated",[2] but Taran Adarsh wrote, "Here's a film that pricks your conscience and makes you think".[3] It also failed to do well at the box office.[4]