Kaydyacha Bola (Speak About Law) is a 2005 Indian Marathi-language dark comedy courtroom drama film directed by Chandrakant Kulkarni and produced by Uday Tamhankar.
[1][2] Released in Maharashtra on 4 November 2005 and adapted from Jonathan Lynn's My Cousin Vinny (1992), the film stars an ensemble cast of Makarand Anaspure, Sharvari Jamenis, Sachin Khedekar, Mohan Agashe, Umesh Kamat, Akshay Pendse, Nirmiti Sawant and Amita Khopkar.
Being stranded in a strange city with no contacts, Abhijeet helplessly calls his ingenuous mother, Shaku (Amita Khopkar), from the police station in his village to explain their position and requests her to somehow free them from this matter.
Being totally new to the practice of law, Keshav embarrasses himself before the prosecution counsel, Advocate Phadnavis (Sachin Khedekar), and Judge Prabhune (Mohan Agashe) in the first hearing of the trial.
Later, it is shown that Harshavardhan's father, Suryakant Ghodke (Arun Nalawade), who is a respected politician contesting in the elections in India, learns about his and Abhijeet's arrest and decides to arrange for a more experienced lawyer rather than the raw and inexperienced Keshav.
He arranges for Advocate G. B. Godbole (Pushkar Shrotri), but he stammers constantly and has great difficulty in forming cohesive sentences, leading to a lot of amusement in the court.
As regards the case, Keshav creates more reasonable doubt by explaining that the angle of the injuries discovered on Pandurang's dead body strongly indicates that the murderer should have been a left-hander, and points out that both Abhijeet and Harshavardhan are right-handers.
Acting upon Saraswatibai's information, the police succeed in investigating that a group of criminals with a red-coloured Scorpio car in Pune were recently arrested for a bank robbery, and that they are presumably the culprits of Pandurang's murder as well.
However, given that Keshav has committed a crime by practicing law without a license, Prabhune orders a trial against him for cheating and contempt of court under Section 420 of the Indian Penal Code.