Movie Reviews
Do Aur Do Pyaar Movie Review: Vidya Balan & Pratik Gandhi’s romantic, lighthearted film on infidelity is refreshing
Both Vidya Balan and Pratik Gandhi shines in a relatable love story that is nonjudgmental when it comes to infidelity.
Marriage is no doubt a wonderful institution, but who wants to live in an institution. Azazel Jacobs’s The Lovers (2017), Do Aur Do Pyaar movie shows that marriages are not only about sharing a bed and a bedroom. It needs to have the zing which is missing in most modern day marriages. Probably the familiarity and the comfort of the relationship is so huge that couples start taking the relationship for granted. And that is where the down slide begins.
Marriages are never rosy. It’s mostly messy and that’s what make it challenging. Kavya (Vidya Balan) and Ani (Pratik Gandhi) are married for 12 years. They are not exactly unhappily married, but that mad, passionate love is not there anymore. So, they are looking for affection outside marriage. A relationship outside marriage that makes them feel alive and that partner outside marriage is not judging you for your looks, clumsiness or your personality. That partner outside marriage is finding your flaws to be attractive.
Often in marriages beyond a certain year, you stop engaging with each other, you lose interest and most importantly you don’t argue or fight with each other. Both of you are just like two pieces of furniture. Like Kavya (Vidya Balan) says in the film, “Why is that we don’t have fights like the way we used to do during our initial years of our relationship.” Very true, isn’t it? Relationships stay alive with fights and we often forget that. And again not always do you need to be faithful to each other. Shirsha Guha Thakurta’s feature debut
Do Aur Do Pyaar
tries to say that a certain element of adultery in a relationship is normal.
Do Aur Do Pyaar
shows that for Kavya (Vidya Balan) and Ani (Pratik Gandhi) relationship all they talk about is the size of the garbage bags and allergy medicine. The relationship has gone monotonous and there isn’t any freshness in their conversation. Kavya finds happiness in her relationship with a handsome photographer who mostly works out of New York, but has decided to settle down with her in Bombay. The role is played by Sendhil Ramamurthy. While Ani feels alive in the arms of an aspiring actor Nora played by Ileana D’Cruz. Simple concept that happens in many urban households, but the way the film treats it is what makes it refreshing.
But the happiest part of the film is when Kavya and Ani make a trip to her hometown, Ooty, Tamil Nadu when Kavya’s grandfather expires. They revisit the beginning of their love from there. It kind of brings back nostalgic memories of their love story starting from the lamppost where they hit while riding a scooter to the retro-bar where they used to go for a drink and most importantly their favorite love songs.
The connection of food in films is kind of dying and it is great to see the new filmmaker showing the origin of Chicken65 and Begun posto (aborigines with poppy seed paste). The clash of cultures and the clash of two states (Tamil Nadu and West Bengal) is beautifully depicted in Do Aur Do Pyaar.
Rating: 3 and half out of 5