
Thodi Thodi Si Manmaaniyan
- Director
- Aditya Sarpotdar
- Studio
- NH 8 ProductionJumping Tomato Marketing Pvt Ltd
- Release Date
- 25 May 2017
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Box Office
- ₹0.41 Cr
Cast
Review
Thodi Thodi Si Manmaaniyan attempts to weave together coming-of-age sensibilities with the romance-drama template, but the execution feels scattered across too many thematic threads. The film's central premise—a musician caught between maternal expectations, artistic ambition, and newfound love—carries genuine potential, yet director's treatment lacks the narrative cohesion needed to make these conflicts resonate. The rock band subplot and folk-music romance feel like separate films awkwardly stitched together, with the protagonist's unresolved grief over his father serving as convenient emotional shorthand rather than explored character depth. The performances seem earnest enough, but they're undermined by a screenplay that tells rather than shows, explaining character motivations through dialogue rather than letting conflict organically emerge from competing desires.
What particularly disappoints is how the film squanders its socially conscious elements. Neha's involvement in social causes is mentioned but never meaningfully integrated into the narrative tension—she exists more as an idealized muse than a fully realized character whose values genuinely challenge Siddharth's worldview. The mother-son dynamic, which should anchor the entire emotional architecture, remains surface-level; we understand she wants him abroad, but the film never excavates why his ambitions matter so little to her or how he might bridge that chasm. With a theatrical collection of merely ₹0.415 cro
Storyline
So there's this guy named Siddharth whose mom raised him solo and always pushed him to make it big somewhere overseas. He's in a rock band called Antriksha and decides to enter a music competition that basically flips his whole world upside down. That's when everything starts getting interesting and complicated at the same time.
During all this chaos, Siddharth bumps into Neha, this really inspiring folk singer who's also super involved in social causes. He gets completely drawn to her and the way she thinks about life and making a difference. But things get even messier when he has to deal with some heavy stuff involving his father's passing, which he's probably been avoiding for a while.
Now Siddharth's stuck between what he's always wanted, what his mom expects from him, and these new feelings and realizations that are popping up. He's gotta figure out whether he'll chase his real passion, understand himself better, or just give in to his mom's plans about leaving everything behind. It's basically him trying to figure out who he really is and what actually matters to him.