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          Film: "Yeh Khula Aasmaan"; Cast: Raghuvir Yadav, Raj Tandon, Anya Anand, Yashpal   Sharma and Manjusha Godse; Director: Gitanjali Sinha; Rating: ***
 
 
 |  It was that great poet-thinker Harindranath Chattopadhyay who said: "It's very   simple to be difficult, but very difficult to be simple." By that logic,   debutant director Gitanjali Sinha has pulled off a reasonably admirable feat in   this simple staright-from-the-heart film about the relationship between a   neglected boy Avinash (Raj Tandon) and his lonely grandfather.
 The film   vaguely echoes L.V. Prasad's 1974 tearjerker "Bidaai", though not in any overt   way.
 
 That the grandfather who embraces the boy's loneliness and   insecurities is played by Raghuvir Yadav is a happy coincidence, and one that   fills up the rather austere spaces in the film's narrative.
 
 The   small-town ambience in Bihar, the old sprawling houses with acres of greenery   stretching out from here to eternity, furnish the film with a burnished   exterior.
 
 As for the interiors, don't look too deep. Sinha seems content   skimming the surface of the emotions gliding along gently as the boy finds a new   beginning in his grandfather's company.
 
 Dramatic conflicts are created   through some villainous elements creeping in with embarrassing inopportunity   into the placid ambience. The build-up towards a kite-flying contest is   negotiated with disarming naivette.
 
 "Yeh Khula Aasmaan" is an   old-fashioned simple and transparent tale told with a straightforwardness that   challenges current filmmaking trends of irrelevant complexities.
 
 The   narration is kept simple and largely formulistic. A romance between the gawky   hero and the-girl-next-door (Anya Anand) is teased into the tale. The real hero   of the film, besides the small-town ambience, is Raghuvir. He is in his   elements, even pitching in with a folk song somewhere down the line while the   youngsters at the helm serve their purpose.
 
 Yashpal Sharma as Avinash's   sophisticated tycoon-father is completely miscast.
 
 "Yeh Khula Aasmaan" is   a well-intended heartwarming film. More mellow than melodrama, it revels in   postures of pristine idyllism associated with non-metropolitan   life.
 
 There are no heart-stopping moments of high and low. The drama,   when it ensues, is brought on with disarming simplicity. That the heart is in   the right place is undeniable.
 
 
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