All Is Well
All Is Well
| 21 August 2015 (USA)
All Is Well Trailers

A road trip, undertaken by Rishi Kapoor and Abhishek Bachchan, is later joined by their mother.

Reviews
Hellen I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much
2hotFeature one of my absolute favorites!
TeenzTen An action-packed slog
Jemima It's a movie as timely as it is provocative and amazingly, for much of its running time, it is weirdly funny.
aaronbir Nice storyline and entertaining but it's really good to watch movies with my family and friends Abhishek was outstanding Rishi was outstanding asin was outstanding Songs are really impressive and enjoyable I like them all the time blockbuster This was so hilarious that it reminds me that my favorite actor is the in a comedy film Overall this it's really good and entertaining My rating is 7/10
rickin-shah To write about this movie, I had to google for a word that is opposite of creativity. I stumbled upon "mindlessness" and thats the apt word for this movie. I seriously wonder how such movies can be conceived, financed and produced. Scenes that appear or try to be funny have been ridiculous and seem to annoy more than entertain. I thanked that I did not spend watching it in cinema and watched it on TV, I only wished I had ability to fast forward it. Watch this movie if you are seriously running out films to watch and suggest keeping some paracetamol within close proximity. 1 star for its music but the movie is worth negative stars !
bollywoodirect This is an ad for the book Secrets masquerading as a movieIt's also silly, maudlin, reliant on slapstick and ludicrousness and has one of the worst soundtracks in recent memoryAbhishek returns home from Bangkok after ten years to find his dictatorial, stingy father, Rishi Kapoor, deep in debt to the local toughie, Zeeshan Ayub, and his mother, Supriya Pathak, suffering from Alzheimers. Salvation could lie in some jewelry, left in the safe- keeping of his mother's brother. Or the sale of his Dad's bakery – which the Dad is fundamentally against. Thus begins a ridiculous, hare-brained 'adventure', which also involves Asin (who reads Secrets everyday), and is about to go in for an arranged marriage, but wants to get married to Abhishek, only he is too grumpy / anti-marriage (having seen his parents loveless one) to do so…Along the way, the father-son bicker and try to resolve their issues, the toughie's gang stumble and fumble their way around, stupid caricatures of Punjabi families abound, while Asin gives lovelorn looks and sheds silent tears. The performances are average – the only one who impresses is Zeeshan – and the music is downright terrible. The second half, towards the end, improves a bit and does make a few valid points but it's lost in the midst of the overall silliness. This is definitely a film that is the complete antithesis of its title…Written By Apurv Nagpal author of Eighteen Plus for Bollywoodirect.com
namashi_1 Umesh Shukla's 'All Is Well' is a lighthearted family-comedy, with a few entertaining moments, that leave a mark. However, the writing isn't always funny & lags at times. 'All Is Well' Synopsis: An estranged son, Inder (Abhishek Bachchan) returns home to help his father (Rishi Kapoor), who's in debt. But that's not all, Inder's mother has Alzheimer's & his lady-love tags along with him. Chaos follows...'All Is Well' is passable entertainment. It has some inspiring moments, that provide laughter. The first-hour is breezy & some of the comedic portions work nicely. Its the second-hour, that dips considerably. The humour wears out & the father-son conflict doesn't engage after a point. Even the climax looks hurried. In short, the first-hour is decent, but the second-hour doesn't really work. Sumit Arora & Niren Bhatt's Screenplay is a mixed bag. It begins well & is also funny, but post-interval, it loses pace. Sharper Writing was the need of the day! Umesh Shukla's Direction is ordinary. Sameer Arya's Cinematography is eye-filling. Editing isn't crisp. Music by Various Artists is energetic.Performance-Wise: Abhishek Bachchan does a fine job. He enacts his part sincerely. Rishi Kapoor is loud, but that's the demand of the character. Asin is limited to a few expressions. The Wonderful Supriya Pathak is wasted in an insignificant role. Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub is first-rate. The talented actor plays the bumbling villain with terrific timing. Jameel Khan is adequate. Sonakshi Sinha sizzles in an item number. On the whole, 'All Is Well' works in parts. At best, a one-time watch!