
The Film Emotional Atyachar
- Director
- Akshay Shere
- Studio
- B2 Motion PicturesPurple Haze Motion Pictures Pvt. Ltd
- Release Date
- 2 September 2010
- Running Time
- 90 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹6.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹1.10 Cr
Review
"The Film Emotional Atyachar" is a chaotic mess that mistakes frenetic pacing for entertainment and confuses having too many characters with having a story. The Mumbai-Goa highway chase setup has potential—it's a playground for high-octane cinema—but director squanders it by throwing in Junior Bhai, Joe, Leslie, Bosco, Sophie, Aishwariya, Vikram Jaiswal, and apparently half of Mumbai all scrambling for the same bag of cash. The result is narrative whiplash where no character gets sufficient screen time to breathe or matter, and the supposed "emotional" component promised in the title is nowhere to be found. It's all spectacle and desperation, with dialogue that feels like it was written during a coffee break.
The performances are lost in the shuffle. You can't fault the cast for trying to make something out of this carnival, but when the script keeps cutting away every two minutes to another subplot involving another character after the same loot, it's impossible to build any genuine tension or investment. The direction lurches from one action beat to another without logic or coherence—it's filmmaking by shopping list rather than storytelling. Technical execution is sloppy, editing is rushed (likely because there's so much material to cram in), and the film never settles into a rhythm that works.
What kills "The Film Emotional Atyachar" most is its fundamental dishonesty: it promises emotional depth and delivers none, tries to juggle a dozen storylines and drops them all, a
Storyline
So basically there's this crazy chase happening on the Mumbai-Goa highway where everyone and their mother is after the same bag of cash. You've got Junior Bhai, who's basically a gangster dude, and his whole crew involved in this madness. It's total chaos with all these different groups trying to get their hands on the money at the same time.
The cast is pretty wild too – there's Joe and Leslie caught up in it, plus this gambler named Bosco and a woman named Sophie who are also in the mix. Then you've got Aishwariya and Vikram Jaiswal thrown into the action as well. So there's like a ton of characters all scrambling to grab this prize on the road.
What makes it entertaining is watching how all these different people – the gangsters, the gambler, and everyone else – are all moving at breakneck speed trying to outsmart one another. It's one of those movies where you've got multiple players with their own agendas, and the highway becomes this crazy battleground where anything can happen. The whole vibe is just about who's gonna be clever enough to come out on top.




