Follows two Indian families who must learn to get along despite some amusing mistakes and turmoil along the road. The families are brought together by their children's love for one another.Follows two Indian families who must learn to get along despite some amusing mistakes and turmoil along the road. The families are brought together by their children's love for one another.Follows two Indian families who must learn to get along despite some amusing mistakes and turmoil along the road. The families are brought together by their children's love for one another.
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Much as I love the Kandasamys and the films so far, I feel in this film they have lost their way. It doesn't have the brightness, the pizazz, the spark of the previous movies. Worse, they seem to be sticking to a formula: there's a big event involving both families; each mother believes that she and she alone can manage the event properly, and they both get in the way of each other, the event, and in general make a riotous mess of things, until it all gets ironed out neatly at the end to everybody's satisfaction. Along the way the husbands Elvis and Preggie act as foils to their wives, and the redoubtable Aya gets in some excellent one-liners.
In this film, it's Prishen and Jody's new baby; both Jennifer and Shanthi are of course insistent that each one will show the new parents how to do it right. So it's off to Mauritius they all go. However, Jennifer's itinerary of how they will spend each hour of each day is neatly binned by Prishen, who not only has the four new grandparents, and Aya, put up at a luxury resort, but has himself planned an itinerary for them, much to Jennifer's annoyance.
Preggie and Elvis are even more background figures in this film than in others. Aside from one scene when they instruct Prishen on how to be a new dad (selective deafness, and constipation - thus allowing plenty of alone time) they hardly figure at all. Aya indeed has lots of one-liners, and plenty of having the last word, but it all feels a bit forced and without humour. We were hoping for some brilliant punch-lines, but there are none. There is however, a nice scene where she brilliantly describes the four grandparents to their guide, Moothoo.
Throw in some genuine issues: Jody's postnatal depression, and Jennifer's flashback to her own difficult time as a new mother - and there is the potential for real drama. And in different hands this could have been a truly dramatic film. But we don't expect drama from the Kandasamys, we expect humour and a bit of fighting between Jennifer and Shanthi. This drama thus sits a bit oddly in the film, as though the makers weren't quite sure to handle it. Shanthi is having her own difficulties with her second son Desan accused of bullying and being expelled from school; Desan on the other hand feels he can never measure up to the golden son Prishen (as he puts it in a rap: Prishen is a hero; he, Desan, is a zero).
With a scene in which Jennifer explodes in furious anger at both Prishen and Jody, the feel-good ending - one year later, at baby Arya's first birthday party - seems a bit contrived and unnatural. Too much has happened in the film for it just to end with a colourful dance and Aya's voice-over.
I think this film is for Kandasamy fans only - it's not unwatchable, but it's less than it could have been. And if a fifth film is to be made, they will have to seriously lift their game.
In this film, it's Prishen and Jody's new baby; both Jennifer and Shanthi are of course insistent that each one will show the new parents how to do it right. So it's off to Mauritius they all go. However, Jennifer's itinerary of how they will spend each hour of each day is neatly binned by Prishen, who not only has the four new grandparents, and Aya, put up at a luxury resort, but has himself planned an itinerary for them, much to Jennifer's annoyance.
Preggie and Elvis are even more background figures in this film than in others. Aside from one scene when they instruct Prishen on how to be a new dad (selective deafness, and constipation - thus allowing plenty of alone time) they hardly figure at all. Aya indeed has lots of one-liners, and plenty of having the last word, but it all feels a bit forced and without humour. We were hoping for some brilliant punch-lines, but there are none. There is however, a nice scene where she brilliantly describes the four grandparents to their guide, Moothoo.
Throw in some genuine issues: Jody's postnatal depression, and Jennifer's flashback to her own difficult time as a new mother - and there is the potential for real drama. And in different hands this could have been a truly dramatic film. But we don't expect drama from the Kandasamys, we expect humour and a bit of fighting between Jennifer and Shanthi. This drama thus sits a bit oddly in the film, as though the makers weren't quite sure to handle it. Shanthi is having her own difficulties with her second son Desan accused of bullying and being expelled from school; Desan on the other hand feels he can never measure up to the golden son Prishen (as he puts it in a rap: Prishen is a hero; he, Desan, is a zero).
With a scene in which Jennifer explodes in furious anger at both Prishen and Jody, the feel-good ending - one year later, at baby Arya's first birthday party - seems a bit contrived and unnatural. Too much has happened in the film for it just to end with a colourful dance and Aya's voice-over.
I think this film is for Kandasamy fans only - it's not unwatchable, but it's less than it could have been. And if a fifth film is to be made, they will have to seriously lift their game.
I really do like the cast, the jokes and I just get it. But the horrible horrible treatment to the son and daughter is too much.
The audience waits for a proper lesson to be taught or a serious mind altering discussion with them but nothing happens. They silently just gets forgiven and gets buried. The daughter had a very serious mental health issue and it was not even addressed with her parents and discussed openly on what she was going through. It was really hard to watch, I had to fast forward. It can be very triggering.
I wish the real issues were addressed in the end but it wasn't......
The audience waits for a proper lesson to be taught or a serious mind altering discussion with them but nothing happens. They silently just gets forgiven and gets buried. The daughter had a very serious mental health issue and it was not even addressed with her parents and discussed openly on what she was going through. It was really hard to watch, I had to fast forward. It can be very triggering.
I wish the real issues were addressed in the end but it wasn't......
I looked forward to the movie only to be disappointed 😞.. there was no flow, it seemed like they just put scenes together. The story line was inconsistent. There was no moral to the movie. It showed disrespect to women. Jailoshini is 1 of my favorite characters you ruined her reputation in the other series she was this modern wife and mother an incredible woman.. in this movie they showed no respect for her.. just sad this movie didn't make any sense. The men, I thought learnt from their mistakes in Tripping with the Kandasamys where they learnt not to take their wives for granted,here they give the son Preshen, the worse advice, and him being a doctor had no voice.. where's the lesson here.. there was no humor in this movie just weird jokes that was not funny 😐
The characters were all relatable in their own ways, the story despite it mainly being a comedy never felt stagnant. It always kept moving showing something new every segment of the movie. You can tell the director really knew what they wanted to put together.
The cast, without the cast this movie wouldn't be as golden as it is. Every single cast member added so much to each scene.
It really is a breath of fresh air when a family movie comes along that isn't afraid to broach on topics that deserve to have a light shone on them, to show how the modern generation feels about culture and what truly needs to change about it whilst still preserving that heritage.
Professional production that's worth your time.
The cast, without the cast this movie wouldn't be as golden as it is. Every single cast member added so much to each scene.
It really is a breath of fresh air when a family movie comes along that isn't afraid to broach on topics that deserve to have a light shone on them, to show how the modern generation feels about culture and what truly needs to change about it whilst still preserving that heritage.
Professional production that's worth your time.
The movie covers everything in terms of advertising Mauritius for a holiday. The dialogue and scenes are full of Tourist attractions etc. I'm guessing that was in return for some kind of financial Rebate Scheme from the Mauritius government.
The story is otherwise weak and the gags or genuine funny moments are very far and few. The story comes across like it was written by a writer who just had to come up with something to justify the project.
I'm sure the cast had a blast making the movie on a fun and pretty Island like Mauritius. The veiwers however are going to have a disappointing time watching it. It's definitely the weakest movie of the Kandasamys.
The story is otherwise weak and the gags or genuine funny moments are very far and few. The story comes across like it was written by a writer who just had to come up with something to justify the project.
I'm sure the cast had a blast making the movie on a fun and pretty Island like Mauritius. The veiwers however are going to have a disappointing time watching it. It's definitely the weakest movie of the Kandasamys.
Did you know
- ConnectionsFollows Keeping Up with the Kandasamys (2017)
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- Ailenin En Küçük Üyesi
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- Runtime1 hour 33 minutes
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