Yeh Hai Bakrapur starts off on a promising note but loses steam soon after, says Paloma Sharma.
As soon as the film begins, it isn't too hard to gather that Yeh Hai Bakrapur comes from someone who has dabbled in documentaries.
Yeh Hai Bakrapur is the tale of a young boy named Zulfie and his beloved goat, Shah Rukh, who get caught up in the fickle world of the adults around them -- a world of money, power and politics divided along communal lines.
The film looks like an adaptation of one of Hindi novelist Premchand's stories that one used to have to read during class on lazy summer afternoons -- I specify the time and the weather conditions because that's exactly how you feel once the bond between Zulfie and Shah Rukh has been established in the first five minutes.
Yeh Hai Bakrapur gets off to an interesting start but plunges into a lull soon after. It is hard to believe that an issue so volatile could be woven into such a yawn-inducing story.
The screenplay seems to be that of a short film which was expanded to a 97-minute-long