- Cast:Abhay Deol, Satish Kaushik, Tannishtha Chatterjee
- Director:Dev Benegal
- Producer:Ross Katz Susan/B. Landau
- Writer:Dev Benegal
- Music:Michael Brook
Street, Movie is chief Dev Benegal’s affection letter to film. It’s an offbeat and enchanting festival of the motion pictures.
Be cautioned: the film is moderate and in parts, burdensome and endorsed. Yet, Benegal tells the story with such delicacy and love that you are gradually however unalterably enticed by his vision.
Abhay Deol plays Vishnu, an anxious youngster who can’t stand to acquire his privately-run company of selling a smelling hair oil.
His dad says: sungh ise, yeh tera future hai yet Vishu hightails it out of there at the primary chance.
He offers to drive a battered truck to another town. The truck, fitted with a projector and movies, was at one time a voyaging film.

On course Vishu gets a savvy kid from a side of the road dhaba – when Vishu frowns at the tea he has served, the kid says, “toh kya socha tha, Starbucks hai?”
Somewhat later, he is joined by Chacha, played by Satish Kaushik, a clamoring man who demands being dropped at a mela.
And afterward, there is a sultry rover lady, played by Tannishtha Chatterjee. This diverse group experiences degenerate cops and feared dacoits.
At a certain point, they nearly bite the dust of thirst. Yet, film inhales shading into the darkest situation.
It’s telling that in the film’s title Road and Movie are isolated by a comma.
The film is similarly about both: The bait of the open street and the transformative intensity of the motion pictures.
This is an obviously sleep inducing scene. It’s lovely but then unspeakably remorseless.

In this way, a degenerate cop can beat a man cruelly and ladies must walk miles for a taste of water. In any case, even here, people who have little to grin about discover get a kick out of routine and drama.
The on-screen characters function admirably inside the downplayed rhythms of the film – the most vital are the talkative Kaushik (Satish Kaushik) and the youthful Mohammed Faisal Usmani.
Be that as it may, even at 95 minutes, Road, Movie feels excessively long.
In a great scene, Chacha basically removes scenes from a film they are screening since, he says, they are excessively exhausting.
Street Movie could have finished with some comparative killing and a more fleshed-out account.
All things considered, I prescribe that you set aside a few minutes for the film. It is an incredibly shot tale that will make you grin.