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Jonathan Groff & Karan Soni’s Winning Gay Rom-Com

Connie Marie by Connie Marie
March 14, 2024
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Jonathan Groff & Karan Soni’s Winning Gay Rom-Com
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Walking out of the theater after DDLJ, Jay (Jonathan Groff) launches into a defense of the over-the-top emotionality of Bollywood romances. “I think we’re all embarrassed by the bigness of love,” he declares. His date, Naveen (Karan Soni), is intrigued but skeptical, later recounting the interaction to his work bestie (Peter S. Kim) as a bit weird and kind of corny.

Because A Nice Indian Boy is a rom-com, though, it’s practically a given that Naveen will come around by the end. The film delights in public displays and grand gestures, such that it opens and closes on a pair of weddings. But its real strength lies in its sensitivity toward the messy feelings, smaller acts, and platonic and familial bonds that underlie those epic shows of romance. By the end, even those who don’t fancy themselves the sentimental type — as Naveen doesn’t, and I don’t particularly either — are likely to be won over by its modest but dependable charms.

A Nice Indian Boy

The Bottom Line

A modest charmer.

Venue: SXSW Film Festival (Narrative Spotlight)Cast: Karan Soni, Jonathan Groff, Sunita Mani, Zarna Garg, Harish Patel, Peter S. KimDirector: Roshan SethiScreenwriter: Eric Randall, based on the play by Madhuri Shekar
1 hour 36 minutes

A Nice Indian Boy gets the boy-meets-boy portion of its storyline squared away early. Naveen is a shy Indian American doctor who spends his lonely evenings recording (and usually deleting) messages to former flings like “Guess you’ve been eating an apple a day because you’ve kept this doctor away!” Photographer Jay is more confident and open, a former foster kid whose story got a happy ending when he was adopted by Indian parents. The two start dating after a chance meeting at a Hindu temple, and by the end of the second of the narrative’s five acts, they’re engaged. If that sounds rushed, it is — the bulk of the relationship flies by in a montage covering some unspecified period of time. And throughout, the film’s focus on Naveen cannot help but shortchange Jay, often leaving him as an ideal for Naveen to catch up to rather than a protagonist in his own right.

But it’s a testament to the film’s attention to detail that the bond between Naveen and Jay nevertheless feels sturdy. Soni and Groff share a warm and relaxed chemistry, bolstered by Eric Randall’s efficient script (adapted from the play by Madhuri Shekar). You know these people are super into each other from their first date because there’s no other reason for Naveen to stick around after Jay embarrasses him by bursting into song in the middle of the street, or for Jay to lean in with interest as Naveen rambles in excruciating detail about the parking structure at his job. Director Roshan Sethi tosses in an occasional stylistic flourish to give their courtship an almost fairy-tale feel. When they kiss for the first time, the camera tilts as if in a swoon. When they have sex, it straightens back up, as if to signal how right everything feels when they’re together.

The relationship between Naveen and Jay needs to be as strong as it is, because A Nice Indian Boy‘s true will-they-won’t-they lies between Jay, who has no family of his own, and Naveen’s family, who don’t quite know what to make of this “white orphan artist.” Although Naveen’s been out to his family for years, they haven’t, as he puts it, “ever actually seen me be gay.” His mother, Megha (Zarna Garg), will call him at work to recount the entire plot of Milk in a misguided effort to connect, but neither she nor father Archit (Harish Patel) dare ask about Naveen’s personal life — to the irritation of Naveen’s married sister Arundhathi (Sunita Mani), who gets nothing but invasive questions about whether she’s pregnant yet. For his part, Naveen offers them no details about dating either. He’s certainly never brought home a boyfriend, until his engagement to Jay forces the issue.

Jay’s chaotic first visit to the Gavaskar home is A Nice Indian Boy‘s comedy at its liveliest, bolstered by Soni’s gift for leaning into awkwardness. Naveen’s family veers between trying way too hard to seem accepting, and struggling to contain their surprise and skepticism about Jay. In one moment they’re turning on For the Love of DILFs while brightly announcing, “We watch this gay TV for you.” In another, they’re muttering in Hindi about how Jay’s career as a freelance photographer is probably just American for “unemployed,” before Naven is able to clarify that Jay understands Hindi fluently. (Elsewhere, Kim’s Paul is another reliable source of laughs, rattling off the new rules of gay dating or a harrowing anecdote about getting mugged with the same playful nonchalance.)

But beneath A Nice Indian Boy‘s Meet the Parents-style gags course real fear and hurt. “He didn’t tell his family about me, so it’s like I don’t exist,” Jay complains to friends after an early fight. The way Naveen finally does introduce Jay seems hardly better, however: Terrified of disappointing his parents, Naveen instructs Jay to be a “more formal” version of himself and rushes to downplay Jay’s vape habit or make his queer-centric art sound more “mainstream,” which in turn makes Jay feel rejected.

Meanwhile, Naveen’s parents struggle to understand the choices he’s made, or indeed the fact that he feels entitled to make the sort of choices they themselves never had at all. When Naveen summons the courage to confront his father about his disinterest in his son’s impending nuptials, Archit retorts, “You know how much say my father gave me in my wedding? None.” The bitterness in his voice hints at wounds from his own past that have may have scarred over, but have certainly never disappeared.

And yet, beneath those lie a foundation of real love, as manifested in a million ways big and small. It can make itself known in gestures as tiny as Archit bringing Megha a hot water bottle on a chilly evening, or Archit incorporating Jay’s suggestions into his trusty korma recipe, or Naveen and Arundhathi commiserating over coffee the morning after a bitter fight. It flows from friends who drag a guy out on the town when he needs to recover from heartbreak, or from relatives who show up prepared to celebrate someone else’s union even as they deal with romantic disappointments of their own.

And, of course, it can shine through in a burst of song or a razzle-dazzle dance number. A Nice Indian Boy might not capture how epic love can be, exactly — it’s too grounded and scrappy for the sorts of over-the-top displays that Jay so admires in the movies. But it gets something of how full it can make life feel.



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Connie Marie

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