Bombay to Bangkok | |
Starring: | Shreyas Talpade Lena Christensen |
Director: | Nagesh Kukunoor |
Producer: | Elahe Hiptoola Rahul Puri |
Music: | Songs: Pritam Salim-Sulaiman Ronnie-Shirish Sukhwinder Singh Background Score: Salim-Sulaiman |
Editing: | Sanjib Datta |
Studio: | Mukta Searchlight Films SIC Productions |
Distributor: | Eros International[1] |
Cinematography: | Sudeep Chatterjee |
Language: | Hindi |
Runtime: | 169 minutes |
Country: | India |
Bombay to Bangkok is a 2008 Indian Hindi comedy film written and directed by Nagesh Kukunoor, starring Shreyas Talpade and Lena Christensen.[2] [3] The film is produced by Elahe Hiptoola, and Rahul Puri.
Shankar, a chef, in desperate need of money, steals from the local don and escapes by tagging along with a team of doctors heading for relief work to Bangkok. Unfortunately, he loses the all-important money bag in the chaos.
In Bangkok, his world turns upside down at a massage parlour where he bumps into Jasmine. The hitch is, she is all Thai and he can't converse with her at all. A ray of hope comes his way the next day when Jasmine turns up desperately in need of a doctor.
Shankar, posing as a doctor along with his Sikh buddy Rachinder, jumps into this whirlpool, while Jasmine soon gets pulled into his bumbling adventures while running away from the don and his son, Jamal.
Sonia Chopra of Sify gave the film 3 out of 5, writing ″Bombay to Bangkok is recommended for a one-time watch for its breezy tone, a few funny moments and a stupendous performance by Talpade.″[4]
Conversely, Khalid Mohamed of Hindustan Times gave the film 2 out of 5, ″This could have been a fun movie if it had strived for quality. No one did. So, do yourself a favour, fly over this Kukunoor’s nest. Or weep.″[5] Taran Adarsh of IndiaFM gave the film 1.5 out of 5, writing ″Shreyas is a fine actor and he proves his abilities yet again. Lena, the Thai actress, is equally competent. The actor enacting the role of Rachinder is good. Vijay Maurya is excellent. Yateen Karyekar is alright. Naseeruddin Shah is there for just one scene. On the whole, BOMBAY TO BANGKOK has a few enjoyable moments, but that's about it.″[6]