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A Nice Indian Boy will be available to rent and buy across Video on Demand platforms from May 6. You will be able to find the film on platforms such as Prime Video, Apple TV, and Fandango at Home. A ...
I love films that offer some introspection on love and romance. A Nice Indian Boy is one of these movies. It follows Naveen (Karan Soni) as he introduces his boyfriend turned fiancé Jay (Jonathan ...
Good Boy' stars Park Bo-gum and Lee Sang-yi share their enthusiasm for India and Bollywood projects. Their visit could ...
While the film “A Nice Indian Boy” seems to have all the elements for a great romcom, it inspires ambivalence instead of ...
The new film, “A Nice Indian Boy” delivers a narrative about acceptance and love that’s told through the unique lens of a mixed-race, same-sex relationship. “A Nice Indian Boy” follows ...
Karan Soni and Jonathan Groff in "A Nice Indian Boy." Credit: David Bukach An incisive expression of family and culture that neither apologizes nor over-explains itself, Roshan Sethi's A Nice ...
Karan Soni and Jonathan Groff both star as the titular character in director Roshan Sethi’s funny and charming romance. In director Roshan Sethi’s “A Nice Indian Boy,” the title doesn’t ...
Ahead of the release of A Nice Indian Boy, now playing in the U.S. and Canada (preceding Andrew Ahn’s The Wedding Banquet remake’s April 18 release), stars Jonathan Groff and Karan Soni spoke ...
Levantine Films is betting on the queer rom-com “A Nice Indian Boy” with a theatrical release — a show of confidence in an era where rom-coms are often relegated to streaming platforms.
In the new romantic comedy, "A Nice Indian Boy," a son brings home his new boyfriend to meet his Indian parents. NPR's Scott Simon speaks to writer-director Roshan Sethi. At the start of the new ...
Early on, the film “A Nice Indian Boy” hints at this swift romantic pace when Naveen’s mother, Megha (Zarna Garg, a standout), pokes at the familiar tropes of gay romance films while on a ph ...
Stephen Thompson By the time mom's planning a gay Indian wedding, it's hard to tell who the fish-out-of-water is in director Roshan Sethi's sweetly corny adaptation of a stage play by Madhuri Shekar.