Gulf News

The flawed bride in ‘Shaadi’

The star of the just-released Bollywood romantic comedy, Kriti Kharbanda is a flight risk, but we pin her down to glean her thoughts

- By Manjusha Radhakrish­nan, Chief Reporter

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f life were to imitate art, what would actress Kriti Kharbanda do? In her latest romantic drama Shaadi Mein Zaroor

Aana, which released in the UAE yesterday, Kharbanda plays the runaway bride Aarti Shukla, who bolts soon after her wedding to Rajkummar Rao’s character Satyendra. But in real life, if she were left at the altar, she would just try to remain calm and rationalis­e it.

“You should never be somebody’s second option, always be their first,” said Kharbanda, adding that a partner going missing during a wedding is a sign that things weren’t right in the first place.

“It could be a blessing in disguise. You don’t want to spend your life with someone who doesn’t want to spend it with you. The love that you give is the love you deserve. It needs to come back to you, sooner or later. You should be glad that you didn’t end up with someone who has second thoughts about you.”

Plus, divorces can be messy, painful and more cumbersome.

In the trailer of Shaadi Mein Zaroor Aana, directed by Ratnaa Sinha, we are introduced to a cute couple who meet in an arranged marriage scenario and hurtle towards a whirlwind courtship. But the romance morphs into a tale of revenge, betrayal and deceit. Rao plays the bitter beau who meets Aarti a few years down the line and declares that he loathes her.

But will the woman be painted in a negative light, as is the norm in Bollywood films? Ambitious women aren’t always given a fair hand in Hindi films.

“We are not trying to paint anyone in a certain light. When a woman runs away from her wedding, there are multiple reasons why. Our film talks about two sides of the coin — the movie is narrated from the point of view of a boy and a girl,” said Kharbanda. The romantic drama hopes to drive home the point that it’s OK for a woman to take a stand and find a voice for themselves.

“So the whole idea is to show that sometimes putting yourselves first isn’t the most awful thing in the world... But we don’t try to sugar-coat it either. It is what it is,” said Kharbanda.

Just like the adage everything is fair in love and war, this romantic comedy extols the virtues of self-preservati­on.

“This is how life is. We are selfish as human beings. But there’s a difference between being selfish and choosing your own happiness and self.”

Kharbanda, who has acted in several South Indian language films including the Kannada blockbuste­r Super Ranga, claims her latest film is one of the most entertaini­ng ones with a strong social message strain.

“It’s not just entertaini­ng but has strong content too.” She isn’t worried about her boxoffice clash with Irrfan Khan’s romantic comedy

Qarib Qarib Singlle either. “It’s hard to get a solo release and there are millions of Indians who love movies worldwide. So both our films can run side by side and maybe we can throw a success party together. That would be the best.”

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