Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Unfunny, unoriginal, unsweety

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Titu Ki Sweety. Here’s a young guy with no clue what he wants in life; a childhood friend who turns into Lalita Pawar-style mom-in-law every time he spots a girl near his friend; and a woman who claims to be ‘chalu’ but seems more like a bahu of a Sooraj Barjatya film. Have you met or heard of similar characters in real life? I haven’t.

Luv Ranjan, of Pyaar Ka Punchnama fame, is back with his team of actors, Nushrat Bharucha, Kartik Aaryan and Sunny Singh.

This time it’s a story of a girlfriend and a frie- nd fighting over the ‘possess- ion’ of a man. The film opens with Kartik, aka Sonu, delive- ring a Pyaar Ka Punchnama-style speech; only he is talking about the illogical demands of a client. With a few more throwbacks to Ranjan’s films, we find out that Sonu runs an event company and his friend, Titu (Singh), hooks up with all the wrong girls and doesn’t realise they are fooling him. He only has Sonu to save him.

Enter Sweety (Bharucha), via the arranged marriage route, and Sonu’s life is shaken. Not only is he insecure of ‘losing’ his friend, he believes Sweety is too good to be true. From pulling an ex into the fight to manipulati­ng family members, Sonu does goes through the whole saas-bahu tug-o-war to separate Sweety from Titu. The script reeks of misogyny that even the two Pyaar Ka Punchnama films didn’t bring together.

If there’s anything fresh or slightly entertaini­ng, it is the pairing of Alok Nath and Virendra Saxena. The Pyaar Ka Punchnama films worked because they were relatable. Sonu Ke Titu Ki Sweety doesn’t have that, nor is it funny.

 ??  ?? A still from Sonu Ke Titu Ki Sweety.
A still from Sonu Ke Titu Ki Sweety.
 ??  ?? A still from the movie Game Night.
A still from the movie Game Night.

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