RRR is a great movie, but not every Indian movie can be RRR. And thank goodness for that! If every movie is a bombastic, testosterone fueled festival of action, then they all start to blend together. Soemtimes you need a change of pace, like a quirky feel-good family comedy set at a funeral. And that's where Goodbye (2022) comes in.
Newly minted lawyer Tara Bhalla (Rashmika Mandanna) wins her first case and goes out to a nightclub to celebrate. She leaves her phone at the club, only finds out that her mother Gayatri (Neena Gupta) has died suddenly when the bartender who returns her phone tells her. She immediately makes plans to return to her childhood home in Chandigarh to be with her stern and very traditional father Harish (Amitabh Bachchan.) She decides to leave her live-in boyfriend Mudassar (Shivin Narang) behind, since Harish doesn't approve.
Meanwhile Harish and the family housekeeper Delna (Payal Thapa) are trying to contact the rest of the family. Oldest brother Karan (Pavail Gulati) and his wife Daisy (Elli Avrram) promptly catch a flight form their home in Los Angeles. Adopted son Angad (Sahil Mehta) has a bit more trouble, and winds up stuck in Dubai for an extra day. And nobody can get through to middle son Nakul (Abhishek Khan), who is off climbing a mountain somewhere.
Most of the family finally arrives, though there's still no sign of Nakul, and the preparations for the funeral rites begin, under the direction of busybody neighbor P.P. Singh (Ashish Vidyarthi). And they bicker; Tara doesn't feel that the very traditional funeral rites are what her not especially traditional mother would have wanted. Harish doesn't think his sons are taking the rites seriously enough. P.P. Singh is just kind of patronizing. And the Greek chorus of neighbors and friends of Gayatri marvel at the goings on; it's definitely sad, but not solemn, as good-hearted people bumble their way through personal loss, trying their best to make everything perfect because it's the only thing they can do.
And then things start to get better. With the help of an unconventional pandit (Sunil Grover) the family start talking to each other rather than at each other. Secrets are revealed, but they're generally nice secrets. Tara and Harish start seeing things from one another's perspective, and Nakul finally shows up.
And that's it. That's the plot. People suffer a devastating loss, and they process it onscreen. It's a very gentle film, very quirky, and above all very human, mixing moments of gentle comedy with Amitabh's big speech. It's definitely worth a look if you want a change of pace.
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