A
humour-flavoured
love
story
in
the
back
drop
of
politics,
Youngistaan
is
entertaining
and
has
its
moments.
A
video
game
maker,
Abhimanyu
Kaul
(
Jackky
Bhagnani)
resides
in
Japan
with
Anvita
(
Neha
Sharma),
his
girlfriend.
The
first
main
plot
point
of
Youngistaan
comes
when
Abhimanyu's
father,
played
by
Boman
Irani,
who
is
the
Prime
Minister
of
India,
is
admitted
to
ICU.
Party
forces
Abhimanyu
to
take
up
the
role
of
his
father
after
his
demise.
But
this
completely
'over-the-top'
treatment
of
the
film
doesn't
distract
the
entertainment
value
of
the
film.
Abhimanyu,
then,
takes
the
lead
and
makes
policies
that
impress
young
voters.
Media
backs
the
new
prime
minister
and
gives
all
support
to
him,
but
he
gets
puzzled
with
the
media
coverage
of
his
open
relationship
with
his
partner.
Anvita
gets
really
irritated
when
she
can't
have
the
normal
life
they
used
to
lead
in
Japan
after
Abhimanyu
became
the
PM.
But
even
though
very
entertaining
and
funny,
the
film's
story
is
hard
to
believe
because
no
party
will
choose
a
man
with
no
experience
in
politics
for
the
PM
job.
But
the
very
premise
of
the
movie
is
that
so
we
can
forgive
it!
A
well
shot
film,
Youngistaan
looks
cool
in
terms
of
cinematography,
production
design
and
music.
This
film
is
not
for
to
be
taken
seriously,
but
to
enjoy!
If
its
target
audience,
youth,
finds
it
interesting,
it
has
a
great
chance
to
work
well
in
the
Box
Office.
Film
delivers
Jackky
Bhagnani's
best
performance
till
date
and
you
can
also
watch
the
movie
for
Farooq
Shaikh.
It
was
the
gifted
actor's
last
film.
In
total,
director
Syed
Ahmad
Afzal's
debut
is
entertaining
and
watchable!