HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentMiss Shetty Mr Polishetty review: Funny in parts, this romcom isn’t as novel as it thinks it is

Miss Shetty Mr Polishetty review: Funny in parts, this romcom isn’t as novel as it thinks it is

Anushka Shetty is luminescent as Anvitha - a commitment-phobic chef who is lonely. Naveen Polishetty as Sidhu Polishetty, an aspiring stand-up comedian, is effortlessly funny.

September 08, 2023 / 12:35 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Anushka Shetty and Naveen Polishetty in director Mahesh Babu Pachigolla's Telugu romcom Miss Shetty Mr Polishetty, which released in theatres on September 7, 2023. (Screen grab/Aditya Music Co.)
Anushka Shetty and Naveen Polishetty in director Mahesh Babu Pachigolla's Telugu romcom Miss Shetty Mr Polishetty, which released in theatres on September 7, 2023. (Screen grab/Aditya Music India)

Miss Shetty Mr Polishetty is about an accomplished woman who decides she wants a baby but not a man. As such, this is a shockingly new premise for Telugu cinema though Hollywood films like The Back-up Plan (2010) explored it more than a decade ago. Directed by Mahesh Babu Pachigolla, the romcom brings together two charming actors – Anushka Shetty and Naveen Polishetty.

Story continues below Advertisement

Shetty’s Anvitha is a London-based chef who is afraid of getting into relationships because her parents divorced when she was young. The film struggles to find its rhythm in the opening stretch, especially with the badly cast British people who don't sound British. Jayasudha plays Anvitha’s mother and is quickly disposed of through the convenient plot crutch of cancer. The film takes off only when Pachigolla moves past the cliches and lands at the central conflict – how can Anvitha have a baby without a relationship?

Shetty is luminescent as Anvitha, dressed in pleasing pastels and carrying the role with dignity. But Anvitha is also strangely asexual, and that isn’t the same as being commitment-phobic. Though the film wants to depict a “modern” woman, it doesn’t want to challenge traditional ideas of a “good” woman.