Bewakoofiyaan

Bewakoofiyaan

Below AverageRomance
Director
Nupur Asthana
Studio
Yash Raj Films
Release Date
13 March 2014
Running Time
119 min
Language
Hindi
Country
India
Budget
22.00 Cr
Box Office
22.20 Cr

Cast

Review

5/10Critic Score

Nitesh Tiwari's "Bewakoofiyaan" attempts to weave contemporary anxieties about employment and masculinity into a romantic comedy, and while the premise of a man losing his job and struggling to maintain appearances has genuine dramatic potential, the execution falls short of mining that tension effectively. Rishi Kapoor and Pallavi Sharda share an easy chemistry, and there are moments—particularly in scenes exploring V.K.'s own crisis of purpose—where the film hints at something more substantial than the typical rom-com fare. However, the tonal inconsistency undermines the emotional stakes; the film oscillates uncertainly between treating financial ruin as comedy fodder and as a source of genuine relationship trauma, never quite committing fully to either approach. The supporting characters feel sketched rather than lived-in, and the climactic resolution arrives with a sense of inevitability rather than earned catharsis.

What works most convincingly is the film's willingness to acknowledge that job loss and economic anxiety don't make for easy laughs—yet paradoxically, it often tries to anyway, creating an awkward friction between its dramatic intentions and comedic impulses. Sharda grounds her performance with a quiet frustration that deserves more room to breathe, while Kapoor's portrayal of a man grappling with lost identity has moments of genuine poignancy. The problem is structural: the script doesn't trust its own seriousness long enough to let these character arcs dev

Vikram Bose, Bollyhits ↗

Storyline

So this guy Mohit just got promoted at his marketing job, and he's super excited—he even proposes to his girlfriend Myra right after! But here's where things get messy: Myra's dad, V.K., is this retired government officer who doesn't think Mohit can actually take care of his daughter. He basically sets up this whole challenge, dragging Mohit to the club to play squash constantly to "test" him out. It's pretty awkward, honestly!

Then everything falls apart when Mohit suddenly loses his job, but he and Myra pretend he still has it so V.K. doesn't find out. Meanwhile, V.K. is also struggling because retirement isn't sitting well with him, so he wants to get back to work too. Myra's upset about her dad working again, but Mohit secretly helps him look for jobs anyway. Money problems start piling up—Mohit's borrowing from Myra, getting calls from lenders, the whole deal becomes really stressful.

Things blow up between Mohit and Myra when he can't pay her back, so they actually break up. He sells his car, moves to a tiny apartment, and ends up working at a café just to survive. Meanwhile, Myra's dealing with her own stuff and even gets offered a transfer to Dubai. It's this whole mess of miscommunication and financial stress that tears everyone apart, and you're just waiting to see if they can figure things out!

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