• The writing doesn’t pack the emotional urgency of The Lunchbox, and the characters aren’t as compelling. There is a delicate quality to the central relationship but it never takes flight. Batra keeps the story on slow-burn; how you wish he’d stirred things up from time to time.

    In the end Photograph feels oddly out of focus.

  • Shubhra Gupta
    Shubhra Gupta
    Indian Express

    4

    A tiny cameo by Vijay Raaz illustrates what this film needed more of: a touch of whimsy, a kind of magic. More of this, wrapped in Mohd Rafi’s honeyed voice (yes, that’s why Siddiqui is named Rafi) which wafts over the film, would have made this odd couple romance much more believable.

  • Arnab Banerjee
    Arnab Banerjee
    Deccan Chronicle

    5

    Batra’s Lunchbox was set to a fast lane and recounts with uncertainty the romance between a couple belonging to differing backgrounds. It’s slow pace is thoughtfully calculate, and should not let the viewer drift away from its basic premise — the monotonous sameness of some people’s lives and their constant yearning for something that must be a welcome relief that could lead to fulfilling their innermost desires.

  • Meena Iyer
    Meena Iyer
    DNA India

    5

    If you like romance on slow burn, Photograph might appeal to you. Otherwise, just leaf through your own albums.