Yogesh Mittal who has earlier worked as an assistant director and as a part of several production teams.
"[11] The following critics gave the film three or more stars: Johnson Thomas (Tribune),[12] Vijay Vashishth (Ndtv Hindi),[13] Raghuvendra Singh (Dainik Jagran), Bhavik Sanghvi (Red FM), Parag Chapekar (Liveindia) and found "very gripping and engrossing" by the viewers.
Debut making director Yogesh Mittal’s film ‘Yeh Faasley’ is one such offering.
It not only offers a welcome change from the run-of-the-mill Bollywood masala fantasy, it also makes a strong case for aesthetics.
Form and content are pretty high on the director’s list of elements required for a film to count and ‘Yeh Faasley’ the solo release this week is strong on both.
At the same time, it would be grossly unfair to write off this film, which manages to also deliver an excellent storyline and some few sincere performances.
Technically, the film is all over the place, but once the story kicks off, it manages to keep you glued to the edge of your seat with its several nail biting twists and turns.
A good deal of hard work seems to have gone into the writing and even though it appears that the direction could have been more stylish, director Yogesh Mittal does manage to create an eerie atmosphere, passionately blending the forgotten past with Arunima’s haunted present.