Kucch Luv Jaisaa

Paired by circumstances.
The poster of 'Kucch Luv Jaisaa'.
The poster of 'Kucch Luv Jaisaa'.
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2 min read

'Kucch Luv Jaisaa' (Hindi)

Director: Barnali Ray Shukla

Cast: Shefali Shah, Rahul Bose, Sumeet Raghavan, Neetu Chandra

Shared birthdays and sundered dreams reduce the degrees of separation between a gangster and a bored stay-at-home mom For how many contiguous units of time can we witness a thing of beauty and remain enamoured by it? Minutes? Hours? Years? Monogamy demands that we remain enthralled by a lover until the end of either our time or theirs. If only that instinctive surge of emotion that arises in a relationship’s initial stages could be bottled and used in sparing amounts over its lifetime.

The packaged endorphins would avoid the fungal growth of familiarity and the spores of contempt that slowly begin to spread over what was once a thing of consummate beauty.

However, until biochemistry perfects this procedure of infinite possibilities, we will be stuck with the onset of boredom and the existential crises it precipitates. The title scenes of Vipul Shah’s ‘Kucch Luv Jaisaa’ are a quick study in the slow deterioration of a marriage into the mundane. Madhu Saxena, the film’s central character played by a comely Shefali Shah, and her order-loving husband, Shravan (played by Sumeet Raghavan) go from sleeping with their legs intertwined as newlyweds to being separated by the gulf of daily grind.

The film trains its focus on Madhu and her despair at disappearing in the eyes of her husband, children and even the domestic help. As a stay-at-home mom, she feels her contributions at home are not being given due credit. And her angst seems entirely justified when her husband compares her to the chipkali that believes it is holding the roof up.

After nearly a decade of marital decay, her loving husband has forgotten her birthday and she feels her transformation into one of the many inanimate pieces of furniture that adorn her house is complete. Borrowing a line from the Howard Beale handbook, she decides not take it anymore.

Unbeknownst to Madhu, a dreaded gangster, Raghav (Rahul Bose in a brooding effort) has been sold out to the cops by his moll, Rhea. This is Rhea’s birthday gift to Raghav whose dreams of domestic bliss are forever clouded by the sounds of gunshots and looming cops.

Circumstances and dubious writing throw this odd couple, one on the run from boredom the other from the long and rather incompetent arm of the law, together. Madhu, intent on exploring her wild side, allows herself to be led on a wild goose chase by Raghav. And over the course of their misadventures, we are expected to believe that a completely above board affection, founded entirely on the golden heart of a gangster and the angst-ridden antics of a housewife, develops between the two.

The emphasis is largely on the screen chemistry between Bose and Shah, but the paces they are put through ends up being the acme anchor that breaks the camel’s back.

As the film trudges through tedium and arrives finally at its conclusion, we have lost all sympathy for Madhu and are downright happy to see the gangster get his just desserts. So, despite a promising start, ‘Kucch Luv Jaisaa’ accomplishes exactly the opposite of what it set out to do.

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The New Indian Express
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