Joggers' Park (film)

The film opens at a Rotary Club function to honour a retired Justice Jyotin Chatterjee.

The youngsters wish to know when the law will relax its grip on their issues (principally around love, romance, and sex).

The judge admits that love makes the world go round and urges the youngsters to enjoy their youth but to do so responsibly.

The judge also agrees (after some initial reluctance) to a suggestion from his family and visits Joggers Park to get some exercise.

She is faced with a legal problem around the ownership of her late father's apartment, and the judge helps her fight and win her case.

They resolve to find a way to end it and settle on stalking the couple and taking pictures of their intimate moments.

(The film is not clear about any sexual activity, but the pictures are sufficient to destroy the judge's reputation and marriage.)

The judge strongly reprimands his son and orders him to end the affair and seek forgiveness from his family.

Jenny's jealous colleagues brought the photos to his tabloid, and Tariq intercepted them just in time to avoid publication.

It turns out that Tariq owes a debt of gratitude to the judge for having helped him with a difficult case several years ago.

Prem Panicker of Rediff praised Victor Banerjee's acting, but said the film was too cliché and unoriginal.

[2] Planet Bollywood also positively reviewed Bannerjee's performance, but criticised the film for having a "lack of tautness that makes it drag in patches".

[3] Taran Adarsh of IndiaFM gave the film 2 out of 5, writing, "On the whole, JOGGERS' PARK is an honest attempt at meaningful, sensible cinema that's slowly proving a healthy alternative for the discerning audiences of metros.