The film revolves around a girl from a poor Coffee family, who loses her parents at a very young age. Armed with the never-say-die attitude towards life, she manages to move ahead against all odds, with a dream in her eyes. She exercises the responsibility of taking care of her only younger brother and grooming him with utmost affection and tolerance. It is when the future looks bright in her eyes, her life is bombarded with unexpected and shocking turn of events.
Renuka Rajwade (Spruha Joshi) travels to Goa for work, wherein she meets the young and dynamic entrepreneur Rohit Sarpotdar. They become friends and eventually fall for each other. However, she decides to confess about her fleeting affair to husband Ranjeet Rajwade (Kashyap Parulekar) the night she returns home. And then begins the drama filled with confrontations and confessions.
Coffee veers around mainly three characters – Renuka, Ranjeet and Rohit. This film can easily be classified as a regular love triangle as it has nothing exceptional to offer.
The poor editing and weak screenplay are some of the obvious flaws that the audiences would easily be able to figure out. The twists are typical and way too predictable. The dialogues, however, are impactful. The music of the film is the saving grace too.
The performances of all the three central characters are decent enough. Spruha leads the line though. Siddharth looks handsome, and performs with great Coffee poise too. But the scenes between Spruha and Kashyap where they are indulging in lengthy conversations, are quite interesting. Despite the fact that Spruha and Siddharth are seen together more often in the film, the chemistry between the former and Kashyap is much better.
The film is a one time watch with a dull start but an impactful climax.
[ Play in VLC / Playit player if audio is not supporting in MX player ]
[ MX প্লেয়ারে অডিও সাপোর্ট না করলে VLC/Playit প্লেয়ারে চালান ]