Doctor g review

  1. Doctor G Review: Doctor G is breezy entertainment and is not preachy
  2. Doctor G Movie Review: This one is a solid prescription for entertainment
  3. Doctor G movie review: If a film does not treat its own serious theme with respect, how can we take it seriously?


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Doctor G Review: Doctor G is breezy entertainment and is not preachy

• • Showtimes • • • • Movies • Movie Reviews • • • • • • • • Releasing Soon • • • • • • Movie Pictures • • • • • • • Movie Wallpapers • • • • • • Videos • • • • • • • Movie Directory • • • • • • • • Streaming Guide • • • • • Celebrities • • • Event Pictures • • • • • Facebook • Twitter • pinterest • In Anubhuti Kashyap's Doctor G, Ayushmann Khurrana plays Uday Gupta, an MBBS graduate who wants to do PG in orthopaedics but only gets admission for gynecology. For a lack of options, Uday goes to a government medical college in Bihar for his PG as the only gynecologist in a female-dominated department. In one scene, a frustrated Uday tells a college mate how he can treat something he does not have. It is true that the male gynecologist population is a minority, and that some women prefer female gynecologists to their male counterparts. But the reality of the situation is not as grim as the movie shows. The film shows it as a way of emphasising the notion that Uday is the odd one out here. It is an easy way of gaining our sympathy for the protagonist. The first half of Doctor G shows how Uday comes to terms with his new vocation. His medical college seniors make fun of him for being the only male doctor in a female-centric department. His HOD, played by Shefali Shah, tells him to be more dedicated to his work and not spoil a seat. Whenever a woman character humiliates Uday, an 'Uday versus Streerog Vibhaag' scorecard appears on screen to underline the level of insult he faced. ...

Doctor G Movie Review: This one is a solid prescription for entertainment

Doctor G Story: Dr Uday Gupta, aspires to specialize in orthopaedics, but much to his strong dislike, he lands up being the only male in the gynaecology department of a medical college in Bhopal. He takes it up, but soon finds himself caught in a series of hilarious situations and incidents. Will the experience make him better doc and a finer human – forms the crux of this medical campus comedy. Doctor G Review: ‘Jo cheez mere paas hai hi nahi, uska ilaaj kaise karoon’ is a line that you’d never expect to hear from a doctor. Except probably this one – the funny, quirky, confused Doctor G (Dr Uday Gupta) played by Ayushmann Khurrana. And of course, another trait that stands out in this doc is how he’s comfortably unaware of his chauvinism and patriarchal beliefs. His world revolves around the stree-rog vibhaag of the medical college, though what he is desperately waiting for is to find an exit route from there. From the word go, the world of Anubhuti Kashyap’s Doctor G presents one character after another, well-sketched and each with a distinct personality that adds layers to the circumstantial chaos and conflict in Dr Uday’s life. Whether its Dr Jenny Jacob (Priyam Saha), Dr KLPD aka Kumudlatha Pamulparthi Diwakaran (Shraddha Jain), the nurses or Shobha Gupta (Sheeba Chadha as Dr Uday's mom), the women in this story lend a lot of might to the narrative at every stage. The myriad characters bring a certain vibrancy to the story which is set largely in a medical college camp...

Doctor G movie review: If a film does not treat its own serious theme with respect, how can we take it seriously?

Doctor G movie review: If a film does not treat its own serious theme with respect, how can we take it seriously? Doctor G is the story of a male doc reluctantly specialising in gynaecology. The film has remarkable clarity in some areas, but is fuzzy and inconsistent elsewhere, ridiculously so in the end. Nushrratt Bharuccha on getting replaced in Dream Girl 2: :I didn’t have the heart to ask the makers, ‘why did you...’ Succession finale review: One of the best shows about sibling warfare Star rating: 2.5/5 Having played a sperm donor in Vicky Donor (2012), a man with erectile dysfunction in Shubh Mangal Saavdhan (2017) and a youngster coming to terms with his premature baldness in Bala (2019), Ayushmann Khurrana is now dealing with a different set of body parts and bodily functions – except that this time they are not his. His new film in theatres, Doctor G, is about a medico who wants to specialise in orthopaedics but secures admission in gynaecology. Instead of immersing himself in his work and studies, Dr Uday Gupta decides to bide his time in the department while preparing to take the entrance exam again. Why? Because his narrow, traditionalist, patronising worldview dictates that gynaecology is a branch of medicine that is of women, for women and by women. Uday shares a home with his mother in Bhopal. His early struggles with women patients in a local government hospital are as much to do with the fact that he takes gynaecology lightly as with the women’s unwillingn...