
Aap Jaisa Koi
- Director
- Vivek Soni
- Studio
- Dharmatic Entertainment
- Release Date
- 11 July 2025
- Running Time
- 115 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
Review
Aap Jaisa Koi arrives with genuine ambition, attempting to dismantle societal conventions around age and romance while questioning what love truly means beyond predetermined norms. The film's heart is evident in its willingness to venture into uncomfortable territory, and there are scattered moments where this courage translates into affecting cinema that resonates with warmth and sincerity. However, the journey from premise to execution reveals considerable cracks. The narrative loses its footing as it progresses, abandoning the emotional specificity of its opening for a more generic romantic comedy rhythm. The female protagonist, in particular, remains a sketch rather than a fully realized character—lacking the psychological texture and inner conflict necessary to anchor a story built on such weighty thematic foundations.
What ultimately undermines the film is a fundamental lack of voice. Rather than forging its own path through this unconventional terrain, the screenplay retreats into familiar rom-com mechanics and well-worn dramatic beats that feel transplanted rather than earned. The feminist aspirations are visible but skin-deep; the progressive messaging reads as performative rather than organically woven into character behavior and dialogue. The screenplay needed sharper writing, more nuanced characterization, and a clearer sense of what it wanted to say beyond simply announcing its good intentions. Aap Jaisa Koi means well, but good intentions alone cannot compensat
Storyline
So there's this middle-aged Sanskrit professor guy named Shri who's been struggling to find love his whole life. He's pretty socially awkward and old-fashioned, living with his best friend in Jamshedpur while his brother keeps pestering him to quit teaching and join the family business. One day, his friend convinces him to try out this anonymous chat app where you can talk to strangers, and Shri ends up connecting with this mysterious woman whose voice totally mesmerizes him.
On the flip side, there's Madhu, a French teacher from Kolkata who's everything Shri isn't—she's modern, independent, confident, and lives life on her own terms in a pretty liberal family. What neither of them knows at first is that Madhu is actually the mystery woman Shri's been chatting with on the app. It's basically a classic setup where the universe is throwing them together in multiple ways.
Here's where it gets interesting—through family connections, a marriage proposal gets arranged between these two polar opposites, and Shri heads to Kolkata to meet her in person. When they finally see each other at a café, there's genuine chemistry happening, and despite being complete opposites, they're actually drawn to each other. The contrast between his reserved nature and her free-spirited personality creates this really compelling dynamic.