fbpx

Review: 420 IPC (Zee5)

TROY RIBIERO reviews.

Reading Time: 2 minutes

 

For the uninitiated, IPC 420 literally means Section 420 of the Indian Penal Code, which deals with offences relating to cheating and dishonesty.

Director Manish Gupta’s 420 IPC is an intriguing, unglamourous, slow-burner dealing with the white-collar, economic crime of cheating.

AT A GLANCE

  • Director: Manish Gupta
  • Cast: Vinay Pathak, Ranvir Shorey, Gul Panag, Rohan Vinod Mehra, Arif Zakaria
  • Rating: ***

Set in Mumbai, 2015, 420 IPC unravels the story of Bansi Keswani (Vinay Pathak) a Chartered Accountant by profession who has influential clients. While his clients are well-to-do, Mr Keswani on his personal turf is drowned in debts. When his client, the Deputy Director of MMRDA (Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority) is arrested by CBI in a Rs 1,200 crore scam, Keswani is interrogated, and his house raided. After a thorough investigation, Keswani is cleared of any wrongdoings.

But immediately after this, builder Neeraj Sinha, another client of Keswani, accuses him of stealing and forging 3 blank cheques of Rs 50 lakh each. This time Keswani is arrested and put into judicial custody, and his life is turned upside down.

READ ALSO: REVIEW: Aranyak (Netflix)

420 IPC
Source: IANS

Vinay Pathak sleepwalks through his character as the staid, poker-faced Keswani. So does Gul Panag, who plays his wife Pooja.

Ranvir Shorey makes an effort to be different, and he largely succeeds in portraying Savak Jamshedji with elan.

Rohan Vinod Mehra is bright, charming, and sincere as Birbal. He has a decent screen presence, but since the character has no must of histrionics to display, he fails to make an impact.

420 IPC boasts fine production qualities, and overall, it will appeal to those keen on legal tangles.

IANS

READ ALSO: Review: Decoupled (Netflix)

What's On

Related Articles

Latest Issue
Radio
What's On
Open App