B.a. Pass Reviews 'link' -

The film was a small, grey-skied indie about a scholarship boy from Jhansi who moves to Delhi for college and slowly gets ground down by the system—ragging, loan sharks, a cynical girlfriend, and finally a quiet, devastating betrayal by his own professor. It had no item song, no hero’s arc. The protagonist, Deepak, ended the film not with a gunshot, but by simply disappearing into a crowd at Nizamuddin station, his degree never used.

User: FilmBuff_2099 “Brilliant cinematography. However, I watched it with my father who has a B.A. pass and he cried. Then he asked me if I think he’s a failure. So thanks for that, movie.” b.a. pass reviews

Alok Sharma had been a film critic for eleven years, and in that time, he had developed a strict rule: never read the user reviews before writing his own. But B.A. Pass was different. The film was a small, grey-skied indie about

Alok laughed at that one. Then he stopped laughing. User: FilmBuff_2099 “Brilliant cinematography

He scrolled deeper. A review from Sweety_18 : “Hero’s glasses are same as my ex-boyfriend. Could not focus. 2 stars.” Another from Rajneesh_tiger : “Interval ke baad kuch nahi hota. Waste of 200 rupees. Should have watched Pushpa reloaded.”

“I have a B.A. pass,” it read. “Not honors. Not gold medal. Just pass. The film got one thing wrong: Deepak disappears. But we don’t disappear. We become invisible while standing in line. We become the man who prints your panini at the metro station. We become the data entry operator who types your address wrong. The film is beautiful, but it lies about the ending. There is no vanishing. There is only passing—barely, always barely.”