
Kis Kisko Pyaar Karoon 2
- Director
- Anukalp Goswami
- Studio
- Venus Records & Tapes
- Release Date
- 12 December 2025
- Running Time
- 142 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹35.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹14.87 Cr
Cast
Review
Kis Kisko Pyaar Karoon 2 operates within the predictable confines of Hindi commercial comedy, rarely venturing beyond established formulas yet managing to extract modest entertainment value from its central conceit. Kapil Sharma demonstrates genuine commitment to the film's anarchic premise of a man juggling multiple romantic entanglements, and his comedic timing succeeds in generating laughs with enough regularity to maintain audience engagement. The screenplay attempts something more substantive beneath the surface-level chaos, weaving reflections on constitutional values and secular harmony into what could have been pure frivolity—a thematic aspiration that occasionally transcends the material's entertainment-first mandate, even if achieved somewhat accidentally.
However, the film crumbles under the weight of its own structural excesses. An overextended runtime becomes a critical liability, suffocating punchlines and allowing the material's dated sensibilities to become increasingly conspicuous as the narrative stretches beyond its natural breaking point. The ensemble cast delivers committed performances amid the controlled mayhem, and intermittent satirical flourishes do surface, yet these instances remain too scattered to elevate the broader experience. The film's inability to reconcile its oscillation between 90s-style family comedy aesthetics and contemporary setting results in a fragmented identity—caught between eras rather than confidently inhabiting either, leavin
Storyline
So there's this guy Mohan who's totally in love with Saniya, but here's the thing – he's Hindu and she's Muslim, and their families have already arranged marriages for them with other people. On Saniya's wedding day, Mohan shows up dressed as her groom to try and run away with her, but plot twist – Saniya's also pulled off her own scheme by replacing herself with her cousin. Everything spirals from there when Mohan accidentally ends up married to a girl named Meera while unconscious, and both his new wife and Saniya threaten to hurt themselves if he doesn't stay with them. He's basically stuck juggling two marriages now, which is absolutely chaotic.
Things get even messier when Saniya convinces Mohan to have a secret wedding with her at a church in Goa, where they'll all pretend to be Christian. But wouldn't you know it, both his wives show up at the same time, and in his panic, he ends up accidentally marrying a third woman named Jenny, a Christian girl who fainted at her own failed wedding. Now Mohan's got this absolute mess on his hands with a priest who's becoming suspicious about what's really going on.
Back in his hometown of Bhopal where Mohan runs a restaurant, everything's gotten completely bonkers. Roohi's staying with one set of parents, Meera with another, and Jenny's living in yet another place with her brother who happens to be a cop. The brother, Inspector David, is actually investigating a case about some guy who's gotten married multiple times across different religions, thanks to a complaint from that priest. The irony is that he has no clue the person he's looking for is actually his new brother-in-law living right under his nose.




