Padukone has matured as an actor and her role as Naina, who hides a winning seriousness behind her spectacles, is much better than what we have seen before. He is in top form, reassigning himself as the most astute and skilful star in Bollywood today. He dances with amazing agility and grace, and plays the self-effacing brat with charm. As usual, the actor has clever control over his emoting skills, making the balance between melodrama and subtle expressions seem like an effortless job. Kapoor devours the possibilities this opens up for him. Everything in the story is dependent on what Bunny does and where he goes. His role is the script’s centrepiece and driver. The film is clearly written for Ranbir Kapoor. Lives have changed, and old friendships and new love are tested. The romance between Bunny and Naina is a foregone conclusion, but it materializes only eight years later when the four meet for Aditi’s marriage to Taran ( Kunaal Roy Kapur). Naina ( Deepika Padukone), their long-forgotten schoolmate, joins them on the trip by serendipity. With his friends Avi ( Aditya Roy Kapoor) and Aditi (Kalki Koechlin), Bunny leaves for a trek in the Himalayas. In one scene, Mukerji establishes Bunny’s relationship with his father ( Farooq Shaikh) and stepmother ( Tanvi Azmi)-he is unresponsive to his father’s affections and has not embraced his stepmother. He is the all-too-common commitment-phobic guy. Bunny ( Ranbir Kapoor) is a footloose, charming photographer whose dream is to travel the world.
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February 2023
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