Bowing to the moral police gaining ground our country, I  have decided to give a guidance rating to the movies. Love in a Metro gets a 15  (in a green circle) for a long and longing display of Shilpa Shetty’s belly,  liberal images of promiscuous activity in urban middle and upper middle classes  and especially call centres (much to the chagrin and wistfulness of my friends  in BPOs) and above all gratuitous scenes of women drinking and smoking purely  for pleasure and without remorse. Now that I have given you three reasons for  seeing the movie, let’s go to the rest.
The  Story
Well actually there are 4-5 stories.  
Aakash (Shiney Ahuja) is a theatre actor playing to  empty halls and struggling to make ends meet while Shikha (Shilpa Shetty) is a  lady struggling with her husband’s silences, absences and distances. They have a  brief encounter at a bus-stop and the inevitable happens and then does not  happen. Shikha’s husband Ranjeet (Kay Kay Menon) is a top executive at a BPO who  happens to be sleeping around with his junior Neha (Kangana Ranaut) who inspired  by movies in which an actress called Kangana acted, feels that sleeping and  weeping are good ways for career advancement. 
Ranjeet uses the apartment of his subordinate Rahul  (Sharman Joshi) for his night shifts. Rahul lets out his apartment for Ranjeet  and other seniors at his BPO to gain some brownie points. Rahul has a crush on  Neha and is crushed again when he realizes that Neha is sleeping with his boss  in his own apartment. Neha’s roommate is Shruthi (Konkona Sen), Shikha’s sister  who is pushing 30 and desperate to get married and runs into Monty (Irrfan  Khan), pushing 40, a complete opposite in character and a male chauvinist who  feels that gazing at a lady’s chest is okay. Again the inevitable happens.  
Shikha (Shilpa) spends some of her time at an old age  home where Shivani (Nafisa Ali) talks about her long lost love. Shivani regains  it when her lover Amol (Dharmendra) comes back after 40 years and they elope  from their old age home to set up a cosy nest for themselves.  
My  Views
“Pehle  tho bistar pe galti se bhi pair  takraate to sab kadwahat pighal jaati thi. Ab tho hamari khamoshiyan bi aapas me  jagadthe hain” – Shikha on her  marriage
“Did you leave her or she left you”  - Shikha, “Love left us” – Aakash
“Hamne Zindagi girvi laga dhi,  makaan tho kharid sake lekin ghar nahin bana sake” – Shikha (on house  mortgage)
  
How I wish movie synopses could be condensed into a few  quotes from the movie. Love in a Metro is that kind of movie. It has 4-5  stories, but one theme. A theme of love lost and gained and (sometimes) lost  again. It has all these parallel stories running together to weave a colourful  tapestry of emotions - hopes, disappointments, love, ambition, greed, confusion  etc. The director Anurag Basu, who has earlier done some decent work in Gangster  and some indecent work in Murder pulls off a petite piece of art here. He has  inspirations – the entire letting-out-the-apartment episode is from Billy  Wilder’s classic  - “The Apartment”. But I am glad when people take their  inspiration from Billy Wilder rather than say movies like Spiderman or Stepmom.  
The stories might be predictable. But Anurag has a deft  hand with characters and an even better one at casting. You grow to know and  love/ hate their characters and at the end of the movie still want to continue  to be with them and know more. Some areas could have been scripted better –  Shiney Ahuja’s role has an incompleteness to it and so does Shilpa Shetty’s.  Nafisa-Dharmendra’s track too could have had a bit more meat. No complaints with  the others. Rahul-Neha’s episode is very sensitively portrayed. The Konkona-  Irrfan episode is easily the highlight of the movie, a wonderful romantic comedy  involving meeting of opposites. Probably one of the most delightfully written  pieces in Hindi cinema of late, reminding you of Basu Chatterjee’s or Hrishikesh  Mukherjee’s gems of the 70s. Both actors steal scenes from each other. Anurag  should just make a movie on these characters. The movie is worth a watch for  this storyline alone. 
Anurag also has some nice directorial touches like the  three singers (including Pritam, the music director himself) who crop at moments  through the movie like the wandering minstrels we read about or Sutradhars,  carrying the story along with some songs.
Anurag Basu’s main talent has been in getting together  one of the finest collections of actors of our generation – Irrfan Khan, Konkona  Sen, Kay Kay, Kangana Ranaut, Shiney Ahuja and still give each of them a  significant role to chew on. Irrfan Khan, as they say is this part of the world,  is a “total stud”. He brings immense depth to his character and you wish his  episodes with Konkona were longer. Konkona Sen is good as usual. My favourite  Kay Kay Menon acts with as much intensity as always. Kangana Ranaut may be being  typecast in a self-destructive woman’s role, but she manages to pull it off each  time. Even Shilpa Shetty is brilliant, her quivering belly conveys more emotions  than most actresses’ faces. And thank Anurag for reminding us of Dharmendra.  
Anurag has a nice sense of visuals, he makes even Mumbai  in rain look good, even those dull, morose, blackened buildings somewhere around  Mahim creek. As he has shown in his earlier movies, Anurag is able to get  fantastic music from his composers and Pritam’s music, though a bit music-video  like, is composed and sung very well. 
Summary
  
Life in a Metro is the kind of movie which Woody Allen  would have made if he was in 
Comments
Irrfan is a riot. The scene where he makes the call to secure Konkona's job captures his character so well.
I wish they made more movies like this.
Sadly, the theatre was practically empty.
cheers
Vishal
Vamshi
yes, even i wish anurag would make a movie just on konkana and irrfan khan's characters.