FINDING FANNY Reviews & Box-Office thread - Page 5

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Posted: 9 years ago
Originally posted by: MoodyFoodie

Finding Fanny by now we all know is not that commercial film, where bullets fly, cars fly, and yes humans too fly (and they do without any superpower, watch Salman Khan's films for reference). We knew what was on our platter even before we entered the theater to watch Finding Fanny, and we came out thriving for more.

Who is the star of the film?
Deepika Padukone, Naseeruddin Shah, Arjun Kapoor, Pankaj Kapur and Dimple Kapadia have given a brilliant performance. The acting is the strength of the film. However, our pick of the actor is Naseerudin Shah.


Lol at the part about Salman. Glad all the actors' acting is being appreciated 👏
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Posted: 9 years ago
All the reviews are great..looking forward to FF
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Posted: 9 years ago
I hope the movie does well at the box office
good luck to the team
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Posted: 9 years ago
Raja Sen @RajaSen  

Alright, my review of @homiadajania's deliciously wicked #FindingFanny: http://rajasen.com/2014/09/09/finding-fanny/ ...


Some beholders like it big. Colombian artist Fernando Botero, a fine fetishist of the fleshy, spent decades drawing and sculpting the ornately obese, men and women chubbily camouflaged by an abundance of curves " and by unexpected softness. Botero's influence in Homi Adajania's wickedly titled Finding Fanny appears an obvious one " I thought I saw a print hanging from a balcony early in the film " but also one that directly inspires a character. Don Pedro is a painter and poser, a worshipper of womanhood, who, with orotund declaration, reveals his love for the large.

A genuine vulgarian who peppers his conversation with cliched phrases and fills majestic brandy bottles with cheap whiskey, Don Pedro " bestowed with unlikely elegance by the fabulous Pankaj Kapoor " is just one of this film's oddball cast, a cast made up exclusively of cartoonish characters who each, like a certain narcoleptic pussycat, have failed to land on their feet. These are more caricatures than people, true, but they are fondly sketched, best compared to those immediately evocative Goan screwballs made up by the late great Mario Miranda with his trademark wiggly lines: a postman with no letters to deliver; a gloomy mechanic with a penchant for sunglasses; an overbearing lady with a sharp tongue; and, well, a girl so pretty nobody dare touch her. Instead of the fictional village of Pocolim, they could all live on the unchanging walls of Bombay's Cafe Mondegar.

There is a story, of course, and it is naturally that of a goose-chase: for isn't all fanny-finding, any hunt for skirt, ultimately a great big shot in the dark? But this 93-minute gem isn't about plot. It is about these wonderfully whimsical characters and about the mood they inhabit. It is about novelistic narration and cinematography that appears tinted by Instagram. And, perhaps more than anything else, it is about English that is as broken as the characters.

India, you see, is entirely occupied by the Bollywoodites. Well, not entirely... One small corner of indomitable Goans holds out... against, at least, the incessant thumkas emanating from cinema both Hindi and Southern. Goa, like so many of us, speaks English, but Goan English " by way of the Portuguese and the Konkani, by way of pork vindaloo and feni " is a unique beast, a frisky lizard that often darts off in unexpected directions mid-sentence. Finding Fanny plunges boldly and determinedly into this port-wine patois, and strikes gold.

Yet making an absurdly loopy film isn't just about kooky characters and madcap milieu (though they are a tremendous help). It is about consistency, for it must stay true to the flavour it promises in order to ground the lunacy into something we can appreciate over a feature-length period, rather than a string of gags forced onto the same backdrop, and Adajania's film impressively holds steadfast. Every minute is silly, unexpected, cheeky. Apropos to the film's title, cinematographer Anil Mehta's camera pointedly (but casually) lingers on the women's derrieres and the men's crotches, and there is a gloriously puerile preoccupation with, as the Generals in Dr Strangelove would say, "bodily fluids" throughout the film, as we witness bedwetting and spitting and sneezing and dreams that are more than moist.

Most of this dreaming comes from the postman, Ferdie, played by Naseeruddin Shah sounding considerably shriller than usual. It is he who seeks the girl named Fanny, and angelic Angie, a local widow, comes naturally to his aid. Deepika Padukone's Angie initially looks to be the film's straight-man, the one normal cog in a sea of nuts, but it is soon apparent her quirks are as strong, albeit less obvious. Her officious mother-in-law (Dimple Kapadia, with a posterior that would have pleased the lads from Spinal Tap) can't help but tag along for the ride, the ride in turn chauffeured by the reluctant Savio, (Arjun Kapoor) a tattooed scowler with designs on Angie. And of course, Don Pedro.

Padukone is luminous, a sly girl with a loose-slippered gait, a casual floppiness that nearly camouflages her look-at-me narcissism, and the heroine gets the body language astonishingly right. She is a very good narrator and " as evidenced by her eyes during the instances of vulnerability the script allows her " a captivating actress. Her Goan accent slips a bit (everytime she says "yaar," for instance, it is with a city twang) but that happens to the finest actresses. This is a role Padukone should be justly proud of. Not least because it balances the film.

For, on one hand, we have Dimple Kapadia and Arjun Kapoor, acting sparsely and naturalistically, letting tush and tattoo respectively do the exaggeratedly heavy lifting for them while they mostly just react. Kapadia is excellent in her part, and Kapoor is a revelation, one who should seek out clever films that allow him to shine with his lackadaisical lustre. On the other end is Pankaj Kapoor, grandstanding with hammy theatricality, a perfect foil to the equally overplayed Naseeruddin. The first time the two shake hands there is a distinct echo of Beckett, specifically Waiting For Godot, to the proceedings, and I see Kapoor as the pretentious Pozzo to Naseer's Estragon, a forgetful, perpetually put-upon dreamer lacking in conversational skills. (Why, he even runs into a character named Vladimir who looks like a soviet version of himself, even crying just like him.)

It is this equilibrium Adajania must be applauded for loudest: when things get all shouty near the film's climax, one character balances it all out with a big, pleased-as-punch grin even as he is surrounded by outrage. Admittedly, the climax is a muddied one, with Adajania straining to tie up loose ends when his very storytelling style " in both this film and his promising debut, Being Cyrus " seems best suited to leaving knots ambiguously open. The epilogue is particularly unnecessary. But, made in a land of Hindi genre movies and starring one of Bollywood's glitziest girls, Finding Fanny is bold enough already. It gives us much, much to smile pleasantly at, to guffaw at, and one moment that will make the theatre gasp " before it brings the house down.

Drink in, then, the grainy blue skies and the utter timelessness, for this film  could be set in 1984, 1965 or tomorrow. Drink in the characters we (and the actors, clearly having a blast) could use more of. Drink in the originality and the swiftly economical storytelling. Drink it all in, and order seconds just as you would at Mondegar, without worrying about the cheque. Because " as Don Pedro teaches us " sometimes we just need a new drink in a marvellous old bottle.

Rating: Four stars


🥳

yesss...seems like even dholak arjun is in shape!!!!

bring it on...

predict ..4 star from anupma, followed by rajeev M.


ok i know mods might close this topic...am way too excited to find the reviews topic..


MERE RAJA NEH BAJAA DI BAJAA..🥳

Edited by briahna - 9 years ago
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Posted: 9 years ago



Posted: 09 September 2014 at 10:41pm | IP Logged
Raja Sen @RajaSen  

Alright, my review of @homiadajania's deliciously wicked #FindingFanny:http://rajasen.com/2014/09/09/finding-fanny/ ...


Some beholders like it big. Colombian artist Fernando Botero, a fine fetishist of the fleshy, spent decades drawing and sculpting the ornately obese, men and women chubbily camouflaged by an abundance of curves " and by unexpected softness. Botero's influence in Homi Adajania's wickedly titled Finding Fanny appears an obvious one " I thought I saw a print hanging from a balcony early in the film " but also one that directly inspires a character. Don Pedro is a painter and poser, a worshipper of womanhood, who, with orotund declaration, reveals his love for the large.

A genuine vulgarian who peppers his conversation with cliched phrases and fills majestic brandy bottles with cheap whiskey, Don Pedro " bestowed with unlikely elegance by the fabulous Pankaj Kapoor " is just one of this film's oddball cast, a cast made up exclusively of cartoonish characters who each, like a certain narcoleptic pussycat, have failed to land on their feet. These are more caricatures than people, true, but they are fondly sketched, best compared to those immediately evocative Goan screwballs made up by the late great Mario Miranda with his trademark wiggly lines: a postman with no letters to deliver; a gloomy mechanic with a penchant for sunglasses; an overbearing lady with a sharp tongue; and, well, a girl so pretty nobody dare touch her. Instead of the fictional village of Pocolim, they could all live on the unchanging walls of Bombay's Cafe Mondegar.

There is a story, of course, and it is naturally that of a goose-chase: for isn't all fanny-finding, any hunt for skirt, ultimately a great big shot in the dark? But this 93-minute gem isn't about plot. It is about these wonderfully whimsical characters and about the mood they inhabit. It is about novelistic narration and cinematography that appears tinted by Instagram. And, perhaps more than anything else, it is about English that is as broken as the characters.

India, you see, is entirely occupied by the Bollywoodites. Well, not entirely... One small corner of indomitable Goans holds out... against, at least, the incessant thumkas emanating from cinema both Hindi and Southern. Goa, like so many of us, speaks English, but Goan English " by way of the Portuguese and the Konkani, by way of pork vindaloo and feni " is a unique beast, a frisky lizard that often darts off in unexpected directions mid-sentence. Finding Fanny plunges boldly and determinedly into this port-wine patois, and strikes gold.

Yet making an absurdly loopy film isn't just about kooky characters and madcap milieu (though they are a tremendous help). It is about consistency, for it must stay true to the flavour it promises in order to ground the lunacy into something we can appreciate over a feature-length period, rather than a string of gags forced onto the same backdrop, and Adajania's film impressively holds steadfast. Every minute is silly, unexpected, cheeky. Apropos to the film's title, cinematographer Anil Mehta's camera pointedly (but casually) lingers on the women's derrieres and the men's crotches, and there is a gloriously puerile preoccupation with, as the Generals in Dr Strangelove would say, "bodily fluids" throughout the film, as we witness bedwetting and spitting and sneezing and dreams that are more than moist.

Most of this dreaming comes from the postman, Ferdie, played by Naseeruddin Shah sounding considerably shriller than usual. It is he who seeks the girl named Fanny, and angelic Angie, a local widow, comes naturally to his aid. Deepika Padukone's Angie initially looks to be the film's straight-man, the one normal cog in a sea of nuts, but it is soon apparent her quirks are as strong, albeit less obvious. Her officious mother-in-law (Dimple Kapadia, with a posterior that would have pleased the lads from Spinal Tap) can't help but tag along for the ride, the ride in turn chauffeured by the reluctant Savio, (Arjun Kapoor) a tattooed scowler with designs on Angie. And of course, Don Pedro.

Padukone is luminous, a sly girl with a loose-slippered gait, a casual floppiness that nearly camouflages her look-at-me narcissism, and the heroine gets the body language astonishingly right. She is a very good narrator and " as evidenced by her eyes during the instances of vulnerability the script allows her " a captivating actress. Her Goan accent slips a bit (everytime she says "yaar," for instance, it is with a city twang) but that happens to the finest actresses. This is a role Padukone should be justly proud of. Not least because it balances the film.

For, on one hand, we have Dimple Kapadia and Arjun Kapoor, acting sparsely and naturalistically, letting tush and tattoo respectively do the exaggeratedly heavy lifting for them while they mostly just react. Kapadia is excellent in her part, and Kapoor is a revelation, one who should seek out clever films that allow him to shine with his lackadaisical lustre. On the other end is Pankaj Kapoor, grandstanding with hammy theatricality, a perfect foil to the equally overplayed Naseeruddin. The first time the two shake hands there is a distinct echo of Beckett, specifically Waiting For Godot, to the proceedings, and I see Kapoor as the pretentious Pozzo to Naseer's Estragon, a forgetful, perpetually put-upon dreamer lacking in conversational skills. (Why, he even runs into a character named Vladimir who looks like a soviet version of himself, even crying just like him.)

It is this equilibrium Adajania must be applauded for loudest: when things get all shouty near the film's climax, one character balances it all out with a big, pleased-as-punch grin even as he is surrounded by outrage. Admittedly, the climax is a muddied one, with Adajania straining to tie up loose ends when his very storytelling style " in both this film and his promising debut, Being Cyrus " seems best suited to leaving knots ambiguously open. The epilogue is particularly unnecessary. But, made in a land of Hindi genre movies and starring one of Bollywood's glitziest girls, Finding Fanny is bold enough already. It gives us much, much to smile pleasantly at, to guffaw at, and one moment that will make the theatre gasp " before it brings the house down.

Drink in, then, the grainy blue skies and the utter timelessness, for this film  could be set in 1984, 1965 or tomorrow. Drink in the characters we (and the actors, clearly having a blast) could use more of. Drink in the originality and the swiftly economical storytelling. Drink it all in, and order seconds just as you would at Mondegar, without worrying about the cheque. Because " as Don Pedro teaches us " sometimes we just need a new drink in a marvellous old bottle.

Rating: Four star

🤗

mere raja neh bajaa di baaja

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Posted: 9 years ago

Just saw #FindingFanny! Incredibly real performances by the gorgeous @deepikapadukone, @arjunk26 & the entire cast.. #fannyisfunny!!!

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Posted: 9 years ago

Hrithik Roshan, Karan Johar, Imtiaz Ali Hail Finding Fanny'

Homi Adajania's Finding Fanny has impressed the best in the business. The makers have been very confident to show the movie much before its release and they have certainly not gone wrong in their promotional strategy. The film that stars Deepika Padukone, Arjun Kapoor, Naseeruddin Shah, Pankaj Kapur and Dimple Kapadia in pivotal roles has been hailed as the break-out film of 2014 by some of the biggest names in Bollywood.

Finding Fanny' Movie Poster

Karan Johar says, "I absolutely loved it. Its one of the finest written films I have seen in a very long time and its what you call an ensemble victory. Each performance - Pankaj, Naseer, Dimple, Arjun, Deepika - are all outstanding - but the biggest star of the film will remain Homi. He put it together and he set a world that you haven't seen - the way he handled performances, the nuances of the screenplay. It's a complete directorial victory. I enjoyed it thoroughly."

Hrithik Roshan adds, "I saw the promos of the film and I decided that I am going to love this film. There are some films that you already decide you are going to like and I loved it."

Imtiaz Ali says, "Finding Fanny is a really unique film, I really enjoyed it. Its crazy. It's the director who has made it very very crazy and interesting. You could relate to all these people whom you see behind me. Very enjoyable, very funny."

Presented by Fox Star Studios and produced by Dinesh Vijan's Maddock Films, Finding Fanny releases this Friday.

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Posted: 9 years ago
Finding Fanny
By Bollywood Hungama News Network, 10 Sep 2014, 12:35 hrs IST
Rating: 3 | 
Pocolim, a quaint, fictitious village in Goa symbolizes what FINDING FANNY is all about. Far away from the maddening crowd, unhurried languid pace, the meaning of 'competition' doesn't exist in their dictionary and the inhabitants are kings/queens of their own sweet-sordid world. It won't be fair to judge FINDING FANNY with the same barometer as the regular commercial fare doled out by Bollywood. Writer-Director Homi Adajania has dared to break all conventional rules and manages to serve an absorbing and entertaining story that keeps you interested all of 93 minutes of the run time. It will surely appeal to the target group of a discerning audience that values sensible entertainment. Yet, one can't deny that it has a very limited appeal as the idea of film entertainment for most people in India isn't intellectual artistry.

Homi Adajania and Kersi Khambatta's writing is attention grabbing. The dialogues (in English, with a smattering of a Goan dialect) are intelligent, ironic and very funny. You'd love to read them again and again once the novel (from which the screenplay has been culled) will release next year. Even though the duration of the film is one and a half hours, the narrative is never hurried. There's no eagerness to reach anywhere, it's the eventful journey that takes you for a joyous ride. Love can be gloriously, subtle and enriching whether you are or aren't looking for it. Lust is always fascinating. No two ways about it. The search for Stephanie Fernandes has its share of adventure, conflict, rediscovering love, germination of 'Art' and the redundancy of the 'subject' post 'climax'.

Pankaj Kapur's [Pedro] delicious lecherousness is the big highlight of FINDING FANNY. He is a magician of an actor. You don't want to miss anything he says or does. He has some of the best lines in the film. When he addresses Ferdie [Naseeruddin Shah] as 'Casanova of Konkan', and the manner in which he says it, one bursts out laughing. He shamelessly woos Rosie [Dimple Kapadia] making no bones about the reason for his 'interest' in her. Dimple looks stunning for her age (though the much hyped prosthetic bum doesn't add any visual value, it rather hinders her movement to an extent). She brings the house down at several occasions with her straight faced rejoinders or one-liners. The scene where Pedro makes a portrait of Rosie is a laugh-riot. Pankaj Kapur, take a bow sir!

Deepika Padukone [Angie] looks exceedingly pretty and effortlessly merges with the brilliant trio of Naseer, Pankaj and Dimple. It's criminal to imagine her as a widow. After the much publicized ping-pong with the Censor Board, the 'virgin' element doesn't make sense when Angie tells Savio [Arjun Kapoor] post making love, that "there'll be many more times and he could get better ..." For someone who has never 'experienced' sex before, to tell the man that he could get 'better', sounds presumptuous. Arjun displays his angst-and-anger. Naseeruddin Shah as Ferdie, like a chameleon, turns a different colour. His unsure composure, incorrigible romanticism and the propensity to exaggerate his own affliction is captivating.

Background music score [Mathias Duplessy] is an intrinsic character in itself. Like the film, it doesn't have a conventional sound. The moody mind bursts into songs that the heart sings wafting away in the collective memory of viewers for posterity. 'Shake Your Bootiya' [Sachin-Jigar] is the only so-called commercial element in the film and that too has been done in a classy manner. The music video of 'Shake Your Bootiya' has been put together highly creatively. Masterly camera work [Anil Mehta] is stunning. There is nothing dramatic about the shot taking. It seems the camera is enjoying sneaking into the lives of crazy souls capturing their odd moments from several angles. Editing [Sreekar Prasad] is spot on. It's a taut film leaving no scope for undue details. Sound design [Nakul Kamte] makes this journey come alive. You hear what you must hear and superfluousness doesn't exist.

FINDING FANNY is Homi Adajania's baby all the way. He, along with Kersi Khambatta believed in the idiosyncratic world of Pocolim giving birth to odd characters each aching to narrate their respective stories. Homi never compromises on giving vent to his crazy vision. 'Cocktail' wasn't a film he must have been totally satisfied with, but FINDING FANNY is almost exactly what he must have visualized. The five odd characters offer lots of intelligent entertainment but again, the characterization and the reasons for their actions may seem bizarre to a wide section of the cine going public in India. The attempt to tie lose ends at the end doesn't augur well for a film that revels in taking risks.

On the whole, it is commendable on the part of Fox and Dinesh Vijan to have diligently backed this project. With a big name like Deepika Padukone getting associated with this film and then Arjun Kapoor (scoring well at the Box Office) bringing in eye balls too, FINDING FANNY has enough curiosity around it. If you're tired of the nonsensical fare doled out by Bollywood week after week and have a palate for Unusual-Entertainment, then FINDING FANNY will fill your heart with joy.
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Posted: 9 years ago
Topics : Bollywood Movie Review
Rating : 4

Review:

Everybody knows everybody here, in Pocolim, a small village in Goa. It is so laid back and calm, it seems like time stands still. Forty six years have passed since Ferdie (Naseeruddin Shah) heard of his lady love Fanny (Anjali Patil). A letter at his door step urges him to set out on a search for her. But he's not the only seeker. Angie (Deepika Padukone), Don Pedro Cleto Colaco (Pankaj Kapur), Savio (Arjun Kapoor) and Lady Rosalina (Dimple Kapadia) join him in this unforgettable journey called 'Finding Fanny'. Why? Watch the movie and find out for yourself.

If you've seen 'Being Cyrus', one of those underrated quality films that sink without a trace (unfortunately), you'd know his impeccable style of storytelling by now. Right from the way the characters respond to each other to the way the journey unfolds, the film is so nuanced and yet so light-hearted, it will fill your heart with joy. It is not just the characters who set out on a search, the director ropes the audience in as well, and brilliantly so. The script is fresh and the dialogues, supple with the perfect amount of humour and thoughtfulness. You may find the pace of the film slow at times, but that is the very essence of this film. The film soothes your eyes and relaxes your mind. No, it's not primarily a comedy. You wouldn't find LOL moments in the film, but it will definitely leave you smiling throughout. It depicts life as is - no masala added. Goa has been captures in such a captivating way by the cinematographer; you would want to take the next flight available.

The best part about the film are the characters - each strikingly different from the other. What's even better is that the script does justice to all of them, well, almost (barring a few glitches). The casting is spot on. It looks like the characters were written for these five people. Deepika Padukone as Angie is breathtaking. She is as innocent as she is enchanting, and as simple as she is mysterious. She gives up her glam-doll image and sinks so deep into the character, it looks tailor made for her. This has to be one of the most defining roles of her career. Arjun Kapoor impresses in a controlled performance as the foul tempered mechanic. Dimple Kapadia does what she is best at - charming. But it is Naseeruddin Shah and Pankaj Kapur that steal the show. While Naseeruddin Shah keeps you hooked on to the screen with his loverlorn act, it is Pankaj Kapur who entertains with his impish grins and lustful stares. His comic timing is just perfect. Man, is there anything he can't do? His obsession with Dimple Kapadia's character makes for some of the best moments in the film. Together, these five actors create a spectacle on screen. Even though most of them are sharing screen space for the first time, their camaraderie is applause worthy.

Verdict: 'Finding Fanny' is a much needed break from the Rohit Shetty brand of idiotic films that expect you to leave your brains behind. It is a reminder that there's still a lot of scope left for Bollywood as far as path breaking films are concerned. It is one of those rare films you feel a connection with. 'Finding Fanny' is a quest for finding happiness. Watch it, who knows, you may find the answers you're seeking too!

Photo: Illuminati Films (Main Image)

MensXP Team reviewed Finding Fanny on Wednesday, 10 Sep 2014
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Finding Fanny movie review: It touches your heart with its philosophies

Abhishek Gupta [ Updated 10 Sep 2014, 17:20:37 ]
Finding Fanny movie review: It touches your heart with its philosophies
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Take on this road trip along with the fantastic five and discover the little but essential philosophies of life.

Ratings- ***
Stars- Deepika Padukone, Arjun Kapoor, Naseeruddin Shah, Pankaj Kapoor, Dimple Kapadia
Director- Homi Adajania

At some moments it seems that we are watching Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara again minus those exquisite breathtaking visuals, but Finding Fanny is different compared to that Hrithik-Katrina's blockbuster.


Not because it didn't have that picture perfect shots in those appreciable short runtime of 100 minutes but because it lacked the finesse in displaying the solutions of personal problems, which Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara presented perfectly.

Still Homi Adajania's directorial has many such things that less of our Bollywood flicks have dared to touch and explore earlier. The widowed life and relationship of a mother-in-law and daughter-in-law is one of those rare topics which have hardly found place in our movies before.

In one scene Savio Da Gama (Arjun Kapoor) satirically asks Angie (Deepika Padukone) so, happy, just pressing your mother-in-law's (Dimple Kapadia) legs?" A kind-hearted and concerned Angie replies she is actually happy.

In another scene we see Angie making an attempt for filling her mother-in-law's lonely life with joy as she asks Don Pedro Cleto Colaco (Pankaj Kapur) a painter by profession to join them as an accompany on a road trip.

Adajania delicately presents their emotional bond and gives out a perfect outcome to that alongwith other such important issues of one's life. It garners a place in your wits and your hearts and you think over them again and again.

Taking you on a little road trip which, however, seems to be limited to a circular area, the flick's concept aims at finding Ferdie's (Naseeruddin Shah) true love Stefanie "Fanny"  Fernandes (Anjali Patil) after he realizes that it was a failed attempt of proposing through a letter 46 yrs back.

But in fact, it's an opportunity for all of them to find their soul mates since it's true that there's love for all and it's never late for them. The short narration helps the flick getting acceptable while clever dialogues and scenes serve amusement throughout.

Pankaj's character is particularly comical and at the same time it also paints' the psychology of such artists who are so freak in their art of work that they never compromise with their it.

There is one scene featuring him, which is picturised unbelievably. I won't reveal it now and recommend you to find it out yourself. What also adds as a minor disruption is Deepika and Arjun's English slang, which sometimes becomes a bit difficult to understand. Watching the flick in Hindi would create no issues but sub titles in the original English version could have helped audience getting more comfortable.

However, their performances are more favourable for the flick. Deepika as a widow is fantastic. She doesn't over somber on the demise of her husband Gabo (Ranveer Singh) and hers is the character who helps Ferdie find his love. Angie loves pampering all and Deepika's act brings out the right expression for the role.

Arjun Kapoor as a hot headed car mechanic too is in the right form. As a frustrated and heart-broken Savio he does enough justice to his character.

Pankaj Kapoor is phenomenal. While wooing the Rosalina Eucharistica as he calls her "Rosie", Pankaj is lustfully humorous. On the other hand, he is blind-folded and mad when it comes to painting as he accepts no negotiation even if it requires Rosie' to stand like a statue in the scorching heat for all day long.

Naseeruddin Shah as a shy and introvert lover looks innocent and brilliant. He loves singing as Deepika quotes him a man with a golden voice', but that justifies him only until he croons alone.

Watching Dimple Kapadia in this form is sheer pleasure. She loves donning those tight skinned clothes and is loud in her approach.

Three stars for Finding Fanny. Take on this road trip along with the fantastic five and discover the little but essential philosophies of life.