He is married to Shenaaz, who is a salesgirl in a fashion magazine and wants a child, but so far the couple has been unable to conceive.
Vivek Madan manages a South Indian accent all right, but Bobby Bahal's Parsi diction keeps slipping.
Gautam Rode pulls off a couple of sequences, but none of these kids can be called good actors.
"[1] Taran Adarsh of IndiaFM gave the film 1.5 out of 5, writing, "On the whole, U, BOMSI N ME is more for the elite/metro viewer than the commoner.
"[2] The soundtrack was composed by Deepak Pandit while lyrics were penned by Manoj Muntashir and Aseem Arora.