Mahesh (Alok Nair) and his better half Gauri (Ritu Sharma), alongside whatever remains of his siblings — Ganesh (Indrapal Yadav), Suresh (Ashish Shukla) and Ramesh — promise to send their most youthful sibling Kamlesh (Raj Meena) to Allahabad with the sole purpose of instructing him to end up plainly a government worker. In spite of being fiscally traded off, this affectionate group of five go full scale and make life changing penances to help the man with enormous dreams.
Their Kutumb (family), a word emphasized by Mahesh much to everybody's irritation, comes smashing down when the once guileless Kamlesh falls head-over-heels in affection with city whelp Priya (Neha Khan) and surrenders to her unconcerned final proposal without a particle of disgrace.
Alok Nair's holier-than-thou go about as the family head is difficult to process, for the essential reason that it is dreamlike and holds no reality in the present time. Both Alok Nath and Rajpal Yadav have brief parts in the film and don't contribute much to take the messy story ahead. Raj Meena as the double-crossing, difficult sibling Kamlesh is an entire maverick and requirements to sharpen his acting abilities, so does whatever remains of the cast.
This family dramatization, helmed by Amit Shree Yadav, is the B-review adaptation of Hum Saath Hain and the essayist executive is obviously hungover from the 90s style of narrating. The foundation score of Kutumb The Family has Kumar Sanu-like voice lecturing about the ties of blood and even the performers have fizzled at reproducing the easy appeal of their partners from the former time.
Kutumb The Family may have worked regardless of the obfuscated up content, had it been conceptualized in the 90s and discharged around that time. It is far excessively obsolete for 2017.
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