By Mid-Day, May 5, 2007 - 05:59 IST
2 of 3 people found this review helpful The biggest flaw with Yatra is not the pace, or the weird story line, but the style and technique with which Ghose tells his story.
By Ibnlive, May 5, 2007 - 05:57 IST
2 of 3 people found this review helpful At a little over two hours, the film is far too long, it's also pretentious and indulgent, and it's an unworthy follow-up to the director's previous films. There was an elderly lady sitting beside me in the cinema watching Yatra and for the longest time I thought she'd stopped breathing because I didn't see a single reaction from her.
By Filmfare / Times of India / Indiatimes, May 5, 2007 - 05:56 IST
1 of 2 people found this review helpful This off beat film starts off quite well with a celebrated writer and school teacher Dashrath Joglekar (Nana Patekar) narrating the story of his award winning novel 'Janaza', which is a fusion of facts and fiction to a fellow passenger on his way to Delhi...
By Hindustan Times, May 5, 2007 - 05:47 IST
1 of 2 people found this review helpful Going by Rekha's flair for striking the right sur when it comes to the emotionally wrenching (Muqaddar ka Sikandar and Umrao Jaan, for instance), it does seem as if she needed a more compatible director.. and a better film. Alas.
By Rediff, May 5, 2007 - 05:41 IST
1 of 3 people found this review helpful Yatra doesn't work on any count. The narrative is painfully slow. 128 seconds are spent capturing Ghose's obsession with a solitary leafless tree against the orange-hued sky, with birds in motion.
By MoneyControl, May 4, 2007 - 13:05 IST
2 of 4 people found this review helpful There was an elderly lady sitting beside me in the cinema watching "Yatra" and for the longest time I thought she'd stopped breathing because I didn't see a single reaction from her...