Yahaan Sabki Lagi Hai

Yahaan Sabki Lagi Hai

Flop / DisasterSocial
Director
Satavisha BoseCyrus R. khambhataSatavisha Bose, Cyrus R. Khambhata
Studio
Vibrant Works
Release Date
26 May 2015
Running Time
102 min
Language
Hindi
Country
India
Budget
1.00 Cr
Box Office
0.23 Cr

Cast

Review

5/10Critic Score

"Yahaan Sabki Lagi Hai" attempts to dissect class consciousness and economic inequality among urban Indian youth—a thematically rich premise that deserves serious cinema. However, the execution falters significantly. Director struggles to balance the ensemble cast effectively, resulting in uneven character development where some protagonists feel like mere archetypes rather than fully realized individuals. The dialogue, while occasionally sharp in spotting hypocrisy around wealth, often defaults to heavy-handed moralizing that undermines subtlety. The performances are competent but rarely transcendent; the leads seem constrained by a script that prioritizes messaging over genuine emotional authenticity. What could have been a nuanced exploration of socio-economic friction instead becomes a surface-level sermon, preaching rather than showing.

The core narrative—disparate young people navigating relationships across class boundaries—contains genuine potential for conflict and revelation. Yet the film squanders this by resolving tensions too neatly and predictably. Supporting cast members occasionally steal scenes with raw honesty, but their moments feel isolated within a larger framework that lacks thematic cohesion. Technically, the cinematography captures urban spaces adequately but without distinctive visual language; the film could be any mid-budget Hindi drama released in the last five years. The runtime stretches beyond necessity, padding scenes that needed sharper editi

Rahul Mehta, Bollyhits ↗

Storyline

So basically, this movie dives into how money and social class really mess with young people in Indian cities. It looks at how being rich or poor shapes what they believe in and the decisions they make about their lives. It's pretty real about showing how these economic differences actually impact their happiness and relationships.

The film brings together different characters from different backgrounds so you can see how their worlds clash and overlap. It shows you how someone's bank account can totally influence the way they think about themselves and others around them. There's a lot of focus on how these young people navigate their feelings and connections with each other despite coming from such different economic situations.

What makes it interesting is how the movie doesn't just show the surface stuff—it really digs into how being part of the upper or lower class affects someone's mental health and emotional life. You get to see how these young characters struggle with their own choices and beliefs, and how their socio-economic reality either holds them back or gives them advantages. It's a thoughtful look at the invisible walls that money can create between people.

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