Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Lassi With Lavina
    • Home
    • About Lassi with Lavina
      • About Lavina Melwani
    • The Buzz
    • Features
      1. Art
      2. Books
      3. Cinema
      4. Daily Pep Pill
      5. Dance
      6. Faith
      7. Fashion
      8. From Me to You
      9. Lifestyle
      10. Music
      11. People
      Featured
      May 20, 20250

      Banu Mushtaq’s Heart Lamp Wins £ 50,000 International Booker Prize 2025

      Recent
      May 30, 2025

      New York Diary – Photo of the Day: East River

      May 20, 2025

      Banu Mushtaq’s Heart Lamp Wins £ 50,000 International Booker Prize 2025

      March 29, 2025

       Reinventing Widowhood: When the ‘weaker sex’ is the stronger sex

    • Foodisphere
      1. Food Articles
      2. Restaurants
      Featured
      May 5, 20259

      Mango Magic -Alphonso, Langra, and Chausa from India

      Recent
      May 5, 2025

      Mango Magic -Alphonso, Langra, and Chausa from India

      October 28, 2024

      Exploring the Veggie Food Trail to India

      May 11, 2024

      Holi Moly! It’s Cocktails from India by way of NYC’s Bungalow!

    • Events
    • Videos
      • Health & Wellness
      • Fashion & Style
      • Food & Drink
      • Travel & Leisure
    Lassi With Lavina
    You are at:Home»Features»Cinema»Remembering Irrfan Khan – Review -The Lunchbox

    Remembering Irrfan Khan – Review -The Lunchbox

    6
    By Lavina Melwani on April 29, 2020 Cinema, The Buzz
    Share

    Remembering Irrfan khan with love and admiration

    Irrfan Khan in Lunchbox
    The Lunchbox starring Irrfan Khan & Nimrat Kaur
    The Lunchbox starring Irrfan Khan & Nimrat Kaur

     

    Update: Ritesh Batra’s award-winning drama THE LUNCHBOX has now become the highest-grossing Hindi film of 2014 in North America.

    The Irrfan Khan hit has grossed $1.45 million to date surpassing the $1.3 million grossed by both Salman Khan’s latest action picture Jai Ho and the sleeper hit Queen to set a new record for this year.

    The Lunchbox –  Delicious – A Feast of Indian Cinema

     

    The din, the shor of the big city: hurtling trains, crumbling bridges,  millions of people rushing to work, unseeing, uncaring – all cogs in the mammoth churning wheel of the city. Yes, the city does that to you. In such a cacophony of sounds and ocean of rushing humanity, director Ritesh Batra follows a whisper, the fate of one tiffin lunchbox in this bustling metropolis.

    Delivered by the intrepid dabbawallas of Mumbai, the dabbas are prepared by countless housewives for their men at work. According to a Harvard study, only one in a million boxes shunted by the dabbawallas ever gets delivered to the wrong address.  The film follows the story of that one box that gets misdirected and the story of the people, the lives behind it.

     

    The Lunchbox  starring Irrfan Khan, Nimrat Kaur & Nawazuddin Siddiqui – & Mumbai

     

     

    Saajan Fernandes (Irrfan Khan) is a cheerless, aging widower who is an accountant in a company and gets lunch delivered daily,  prepared by a food service. When the boxes get switched, he gets instead the lunchbox of home food cooked by Ila, (Nimrat Kaur) a young middle-class housewife who is trying to put some spice into her failing marriage by sending great food to her negligent husband.

    The mix-up leads to an exchange of notes and a deepening friendship between two strangers; gradually  they confide about loneliness, fears, sadness, memories – and also discover hope and courage. This sounds almost like an O.Henry tale for the couple never really meet or even talk – and yet something akin to relationship develops between two faceless people in the anonymity of the big, uncaring city. In bits and pieces you get to see their homes, their joyless lives and what even just a random human encounter can do to change stilted lives.

    Irrfan Khan, Nimrat Kaur & Nawazuddin Siddiqui…

     

    Nawazuddin Siddiqui & Irrfan khan in The Lunchbox
    Nawazuddin & Irrfan khan in The Lunchbox

     

    Irrfan Khan is superb – he isn’t an actor playing Saajan Fernandes – he is Saajan Fernandes. Never a false move, never a tell-tale sign of his having any other life. The detachment in his eyes, the inward gaze, the isolation seem native to him.  Surely there couldn’t be any cameras around? It’s just you, a fly on the wall, seeing this very private man in his private world.

    A complete foil to his stoic character is Nawazuddin Siddiqui who plays Shaikh, a gregarious newcomer to the office, a cheerful survivor who was orphaned as a child and even chose his own name. With nothing to his name, he still has a lust for living which draws you into his life. Both these actors have a talent for wiping their faces clean of any star persona or past characters and they become their characters.

    Nimrat Kaur, a noted actor in theater but a new face in cinema – is perfect as Ila, the lonely housewife whose magic in the kitchen still cannot bring romance in the bedroom with a cheating, indifferent husband.

     

    Nimrat Kaur in Ritesh Batra's 'The Lunchbox'
    Nimrat Kaur is Ila in ‘The Lunchbox’

    Ritesh Batra & the City of Mumbai

    Along with these actors, a powerful player is the city of Mumbai – with so many different facets. Ila lives in Kandvili, a conservative middle-class neighborhood while Saajan is from Bandra, an old Christian neighborhood. Batra catches the many flavors of Mumbai and this is one of the visual pleasures of the film.

    This debut feature film from Ritesh Batra has been toasted internationally  – it was screened at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival and later won the Grand Rail d’Or.  It’s had a special screening at the Sundance Film Festival and the Toronto Film Festival. It’s been a hit in India and also won several awards including Filmfare and StarGuild awards for best debut director and best supporting actor, as well as the Filmfare award for Best Movie. Batra’s movie, produced by Guneet Monga, Anurag Kashyap and Arun Rangachari, has also been jointly produced by several studios.

    Like the proverbial dabba, The Lunchbox has been shunted around from festival to festival, moved through countries and often seen by people through sheer word of mouth, creating larger audiences.  It is finally being shown in the US and there’s nothing like seeing it on the big screen so make sure to catch it for a satisfying evening of cinema that leaves you craving for more. (It opens on February 28 in New York and Los Angeles, and in additional cities in March)

     

    Related Articles
    Ramleela-Goliyon Ki Raasleela
    Raanjhanaa- An Obsessive Love
    Mira Nair’s The Reluctant Fundamentalist
    Prashant Bhargava’s Patang Soars
    Anurag Kashyap, Godfather of Wasseypur
    Matru Ki Bijli Ka Mandola-Cinematic Feast

     

     

    Lavina Melwani
    • Website

    Lavina Melwani is a New York-based journalist who writes for several international publications. Twitter@lavinamelwani & @lassiwithlavina Sign up for the free newsletter to get your dose of Lassi!

    Related Posts

    Box Office Guru, Hollywood and the Oscars – a Love Story

    Adoptions from India – Everything You wanted to Know

    Santosh – UK’s Nomination for the Oscars – Packs a Powerful Punch

    6 Comments

    1. Lavina Melwani on April 11, 2014 9:41 pm

      Via Google +

      Dariusz Trzaska +1’d

      Naveen Gupta +1’d

      Sunil Yadav +1’d

    2. Lavina Melwani on February 24, 2014 1:59 pm

      Via Twitter

      Alpesh Patel ‏@alpeshtwitting

      .@lassiwithlavina’s take on #TheLunchbox: http://bit.ly/1bZD6lP

      This dabba is going places.

    3. Lavina Melwani on February 24, 2014 1:35 pm

      On Lassi with Lavina and Friends, Facebook Group

      https://www.facebook.com/groups/lassiwithlavinaandfriends/

      Ninu Lalwani – saw the movie and loved it , and liked´the french type ´ending.

      Lavina Melwani
      Hi Ninu Lalwani, loved it too! Please do leave your comment on the site after the article as I’d love readers to see your comment too!

      Ninu Lalwani will do

      Mahesh Harvu Yet to see the movie, heard good things about it.

      Kriti Mukherjee Loved it! The movie and the article

    4. Lavina Melwani on February 24, 2014 1:27 pm

      On Twitter https://twitter.com/lassiwithlavina

      Please sir, Can I have some more? My review of #TheLunchbox starring #IrrfanKhan, #NimratKaur & #Nawazuddin http://bit.ly/1fri1j5

      Aarti Virani ‏@aartivirani

      “…@riteshbatra follows a whisper, the fate of one tiffin lunchbox…” Love @lassiwithlavina’s take on #TheLunchbox: http://bit.ly/1bZD6lP

      Lavina Melwani ‏@lassiwithlavina

      @aartivirani @riteshbatra thanks, Aarti. One of the most satisfying movies I’ve seen in a long while – bravo to Ritesh & the Lunchbox team!

      riteshbatra ‏@riteshbatra

      @aartivirani @lassiwithlavina thanks for the kind words.

    5. Lavina Melwani on February 24, 2014 1:23 pm

      Shago Perkins via Facebook

      Looking forward to watching it.

    6. Lavina Melwani on February 24, 2014 1:21 pm

      Prem Kishore via Facebook

      Waiting for it to come to LA next week!

    Leave A Reply

    top Indian blogs
    Find Us on FaceBook
    Recent Posts
    June 8, 2025

    What is Indian genius? Does it exist?

    May 30, 2025

    New York Diary – Photo of the Day: East River

    May 23, 2025

    New York Diary: An Evening with Deepak Chopra, Chandrika Tandon and Fareed Zakaria

    May 20, 2025

    Banu Mushtaq’s Heart Lamp Wins £ 50,000 International Booker Prize 2025

    May 5, 2025

    Mango Magic -Alphonso, Langra, and Chausa from India

    * indicates required
    Close
    Translate Lassi with Lavina
    Photo Blog
    Women Warriors
    Lassi with Lavina Tweets
    Follow lassiwithlavina on Twitter
    Connect on LinkedIn…
    View Lavina Melwani's LinkedIn profileView Lavina Melwani's profile

    About

    Lassi with Lavina is a dhaba-style offering of life and the arts through the prism of India. It shares the celebrations and concerns of the global Indian woman. Supported by the Knight Foundation for Journalism, it brings stories from New York to New Delhi to readers globally. About Lassi with Lavina

    Copyright © 2015 Lavina Melwani and Lassi with Lavina. Photos © Copyright 2015 Respective Photographers. Reproduction of material without written permission is prohibited

    Children’s Hope – every child counts. Click to learn more

    © 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.