
Aap Ki Khatir
- Director
- Dharmesh Darshan
- Studio
- Feature film soundtrack| genre =
- Release Date
- 24 August 2006
- Running Time
- 127 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹16.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹13.00 Cr
Review
Akshay Kumar and Priyanka Chopra's chemistry is arguably the only genuine spark in Aap Ki Khatir, a romantic comedy that mistakes convoluted plotting for narrative sophistication. The premise—a fake relationship blossoming into real love against the backdrop of a destination wedding—isn't new, yet directors Pankaj Parashar attempts to complicate it with layered family dynamics and a duplicitous antagonist. The problem is execution. The film meanders between romantic beats and contrived dramatic revelations without earning either emotionally. Parashar's direction relies heavily on song sequences and visual spectacle to paper over thinness in the actual storytelling, a tactic that occasionally works in Bollywood but feels exhausting here across nearly two and a half hours. The supporting cast, particularly Kirron Kher, lend warmth, but they cannot salvage a script that privileges plot twists over character development.
What frustrates most is the film's waste of potential. Priyanka Chopra's Anu could have been a refreshingly complex NRI protagonist grappling with genuine hurt and self-delusion, but instead she's reduced to a reactive character waiting for men to validate her worth. The revelation about Danny's betrayal arrives too late and with too little impact to restructure what came before. Akshay Kumar, meanwhile, coasts on his usual charm, never quite inhabiting Aman as anything more than a placeholder for romantic resolution. The wedding setting provides stunning visual
Storyline
So basically, this girl Anu is an NRI living in London who got left at the altar by her boyfriend Danny—super embarrassing, right? She decides to go back to India for her sister Shirani's wedding to this businessman named Kunal, and get this, Kunal is actually Danny's best friend! To make Danny jealous and win him back, Anu asks her coworker Aman to pretend to be her new boyfriend at the wedding. But here's the twist—it turns out Danny had also broken Shirani's heart before, so the guy is basically a total player.
As the wedding festivities go on, something unexpected happens between Anu and Aman. What starts as a fake relationship and some awkward moments gradually turns into real feelings, and they actually start developing genuine chemistry together. Meanwhile, there's all this family drama because Anu's mom Betty married Shirani's dad Arjun after her first husband passed away, so everyone's kind of connected in this messy way.
Things get pretty complicated when Anu discovers that Danny has been trying to get with Shirani behind everyone's backs, and she's upset that Aman knew about it but never told her. She pushes him away, but then Kunal steps in and convinces Aman to stick around for his sake. It's one of those Bollywood situations where emotions are running high, secrets are coming out, and everyone's finally starting to understand what's really going on in their hearts.



