• IANS
    IANS
    Sify

    5

    Overall, the film, though journalistically fuzzy, seems to be made with an idealistic passion.

  • Though many of us may believe the experiment has failed now, it was important to show how the experiment succeeded in the first place. And the movie does it beautifully.

    It can be safely said that the movie once again raises the hopes that AAP did four years ago.

  • Deccan Chronicle Team
    Deccan Chronicle Team
    Deccan Chronicle

    8

    You may like him or hate him but you can’t ignore Kejriwal, this 96-minute long political thriller tells you why.

  • Shubhra Gupta
    Shubhra Gupta
    Indian Express

    6

    From a tax officer to a protestor, to an activist, to a reluctant rookie politician, to winning an election, and to becoming the chief minister of New Delhi, the film is the journey of Arvind Kejriwal, and his AAP.

  • This is a film that can bring up the question of how one can stay impartial when afforded this kind of intimate access over two years. But as a passionately told capsule of the birth and rise of a party, as an insight into party politics, while almost voyeuristic, An Insignificant Man is invaluable and fascinating nonetheless. The film stops in 2013, and the present position and future of AAP offers enough drama to be the stuff of a sequel.

  • Sweta Kaushal
    Sweta Kaushal
    Hindustan Times

    6

    An Insignificant Man is a peek into the working of politics and difficulties of bringing in honest measures to the system. But it does not hold the power to change your political beliefs or give a proper insight into the party and its working. It is only a sneak peek.