| Story
Line :
Aamras
takes one back to the carefree days of life when one does
not have anything to worry about. When one is a teenager and
is on a threshold to explore the life coming ahead. Writer-director
Rupali Guha is quite impressive in the first half but loses
track in the second.
A simple story of four inseparable friends
Jiya (Vega), Pari (Natasha), Rakhi (Maanvi) and Sanya (Aanchal),
who belong to different family backgrounds and study in one
of the most esteemed schools in the city. They stand for each
other in their thick and thin and don’t keep any secret. The
story goes well unless Rupali brings in a romantic twist,
which makes Aamras any regular run-of-mill film.
It’s a youth-centric film and few sequences
like MMS incident in the beginning result in gripping power,
but the film loses threads in the second half. Vega, Natasha,
Maanvi and Aanchal are perfect for their roles. Ajay Singh
Choudhury is wasted. Zarina Wahab and Reema are strictly good.
Sunil Sinha and Manoj Pahwa are good. On the whole, Aamras
needs a lot of strong word of mouth to bring in the audience
and is fairly a good film
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