This week, Siddhant Chaturvedi and Mrunal Thakur starrer has released in theatres — here is our review of the film.

Digital Desk

This week, Siddhant Chaturvedi and Mrunal Thakur starrer has released in theatres — here is our review of the film.

Cast: Siddhant Chaturvedi, Mrunal Thakur, Ila Arun, Joy Sengupta, Ayesha Raza, Inesh Kotian, Sandeepa Dhar, Deepraj Rana, Mona Ambegaonkar, Achint Kaur, Naveen Kaushik, Viraj Ghelani
Director: Ravi Udyawar
Producers: Sanjay Leela Bhansali, Prerna Singh, Umesh Kumar Bansal, Bharat Kumar Ranga
Duration: 2h 18m, Censor: U/A
Release Date: 20 February 2026

Where Modern Love Meets Emotional Stillness An Urban Love Story That Feels Personal and Real
Story

The film approaches love as a gradual emotional discovery rather than a dramatic transformation. It explores how individuals slowly learn to trust, open up, and allow themselves to be emotionally visible in a world that often rewards emotional distance.

Roshni and Shashank are written as deeply human characters — not idealised cinematic lovers, but individuals negotiating self-doubt, expectations, and emotional vulnerability. Their relationship evolves through conversations, misunderstandings, emotional pauses, and small but meaningful moments of comfort.

The metropolitan environment becomes an emotional extension of the narrative. Crowded streets, office spaces, traffic pauses, and late-night drives mirror their inner emotional turbulence and eventual clarity.

The story resonates strongly with modern relationship realities — fear of rejection, pressure of emotional perfection, uncertainty around timing, and the quiet relief of being accepted without performance.

 

Untitled design (74)

 

Direction

The direction remains intimate and character-focused. The narrative relies on emotional truth rather than visual spectacle.

Scenes are allowed to unfold naturally, creating a sense of observational realism. Emotional peaks are understated rather than exaggerated, making the storytelling feel grounded and sincere.

The pacing reflects contemporary relationships — slow emotional build-up, sudden realisations, and quiet emotional acceptance.

Performance

The lead performances are controlled, nuanced, and emotionally intelligent. Emotional transitions are often conveyed through silence, body language, and micro-expressions rather than dialogue-heavy dramatics.

The chemistry between the leads feels organic and lived-in, creating emotional authenticity. Their dynamic feels modern yet emotionally timeless.

Supporting performances add realism and emotional grounding, while the music supports emotional transitions instead of dominating narrative space.

Final Verdict

The film positions romance as emotional companionship rather than dramatic passion. It prioritises emotional safety, acceptance, and quiet connection over grand declarations.

It leaves viewers reflective, comforted, and emotionally fulfilled — a rare tonal achievement in contemporary romance storytelling.

The film ultimately reinforces a simple yet powerful idea: real love is not always loud or cinematic. Sometimes, it is patient, imperfect, and deeply human. Our critic rating for movie is four star

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