
Ajab Gazabb Love
- Director
- Sanjay Gadhvi
- Studio
- Pooja Entertainment
- Release Date
- 25 October 2012
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹29.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹10.20 Cr
Review
Ajab Gazabb Love is a film that mistakes a paper-thin premise for a plot. The central conceit—a wealthy man pretending to be poor to win a girl—could have worked as satire or even lightweight romantic comedy, but instead, director Vinay Sapru treats it with the subtlety of a sledgehammer. Jackky Bhagnani sleepwalks through the role of Rajveer, bringing neither charm nor comedic timing to a character that desperately needs both. Nushrat Bharucha fares slightly better as Madhuri, but she's given so little to work with that it becomes painful watching her try to extract meaning from lines that sound like they were written by algorithm. The supporting cast, including the brother's subplot, feels like padding in a screenplay that was already struggling to justify its runtime.
What truly derails this film is the lazy writing and execution. There's no genuine wit in the romantic deception—just predictable misunderstandings and tiresome "will they/won't they" moments that we've seen done infinitely better in countless other films. The dialogue is cringe-inducing, the humor lands like a wet thud, and the film's commentary on wealth and class consciousness is so superficial it borders on offensive. By the time Karan Singh Chauhan arrives and the charade begins to unravel, you're counting down to the credits. The songs feel like obligations rather than organic moments, the cinematography is functional at best, and there's a complete absence of any spark that might elevate this beyond i
Storyline
So there's this guy Rajveer who's basically living the dream—he's got money, he's got connections, and he's set to inherit his dad's huge car manufacturing business. But then he meets this girl Madhuri and falls head over heels for her. The problem? She absolutely can't stand wealthy people and has this thing for helping out folks who are struggling financially. Talk about terrible timing, right?
To win her over, Rajveer comes up with this wild plan to pretend that he and his entire family are actually broke. I mean, he really commits to the bit, trying to convince Madhuri that they're just regular, ordinary people without a single rupee to their name. It's pretty ridiculous when you think about it, but hey, when you're desperate to impress someone, you do crazy things!
Everything's going smoothly with his little charade until Madhuri's older brother Karan Singh Chauhan shows up to meet Rajveer's family. Things start getting suspicious pretty quickly, and it becomes clear that keeping up the act isn't going to be as easy as he thought. The whole deception starts cracking, and that's where things get really interesting!




