Hoping to do good while making millions, three college graduates create a startup. But as business begins to flourish, their own bond starts to fray.
As ridiculous as this may sound, the character of Kapil encompasses the spirit of every fresher graduate, bitten by the start-up bug, who identifies a path-breaking (or not) business opportunity even in the direst of situations.However, it is the death of an old man in one of the villages where Kapil volunteers to work once a week, which drives him to come up with ‘CarryKaro’, an Ola/Uber-like delivery app that can be used to deliver life-saving medicines to remote villages. His motives may be welfare-driven but he is not shy to admit that he means to also make money. As opposed to his friend Jaya, played by Sheetal Thakur, his business model is unapologetically profit-driven.Udai, along with screenwriter Ketan Bhagat, has deliberately taken a leisurely approach to unfold the events in the film. The first half-an-hour is spent laying out every aspect, conflict, and struggle of getting an idea into motion. From finding the most user-friendly app interface, spreading the word among prospective users, to scrounging for funds, the trio’s journey is palpably arduous, which imbues the film with a kind of conviction that is oft absent from success-story films. It is not a homage to the winning ideas germinating from every nook and cranny of Bangalore’s IT hub, but the effort, the money, the sacrifices that go behind perfecting the idea.Upstarts full Movie Download In Hindi.
Once Kapil finds his investor in the idealistic son of the ‘Beedi king of India’, his grasp over his own creation starts to slip. The chic US-returned financier Veer Diwan (Rajeev Siddhartha) has noble intentions — he claims he is better than his ‘cigarette seller’ father for not “spreading cancer around the world,” instead funding a project that would help millions get access to life-saving drugs.