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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 ...
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 ...
Languages: English. A charming new rom-com starring Karan Soni and Jonathan Groff hit theaters last month, A Nice Indian Boy, which features a whirlwind romance, sweet humor, and plenty of dancing.
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 ...
A Nice Indian Boy is a 2025 romantic comedy directed by Roshan Sethi and adapted from Madhuri Shekar’s stage play. The film centres on Naveen Gavaskar, an Indian-American doctor who brings his ...
Roshan Sethi's romantic comedy A Nice Indian Boy came out on April 4, 2025. With the main character, Naveen, trying to introduce his white artist boyfriend, Jay, to his traditional Indian family ...
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 ...
“A Nice Indian Boy” is exactly what it set out to be: a cute, heartwarming romantic comedy. It tells the story of Naveen (Karan Soni), an introverted doctor, who falls in love with Jay (Jonathan Groff ...
So, he decided to portray a gay Indian wedding ceremony for the first time on film. “A Nice Indian Boy” (Wayfarer Studios) is his fantasy fulfilled. It’s also his personal dream of family acceptance ...
A Nice Indian Boy is a new romantic comedy that combines the intergenerational laughs of a My Big Fat Greek Wedding with a Bollywood romance. The film from Canadian filmmaker Roshan Sethi follows ...
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.