
Love Ke Chakkar Mein
- Director
- B. H. Tharun Kumar
- Studio
- Manash Productions
- Release Date
- 1 June 2006
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹3.05 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹0.35 Cr
Review
"Love Ke Chakkar Mein" attempts to wring comedy from desperation, but it suffocates under the weight of its own contrived plotting. The film's central premise—a desperate man hiring a substitute girlfriend to deceive a potential employer—could have worked as sharp social satire in the vein of "Khosla Ka Ghosla" or even as absurdist comedy like the better entries in Bollywood's con-artist canon. Instead, director Rishab Mishra opts for a meandering narrative that confuses complications with compelling drama. The performances feel serviceable rather than inspired; the leads seem trapped in a script that constantly pivots away from genuine character moments toward increasingly implausible plot twists. By the time the story introduces a missing person angle in its third act, the film has already lost credibility—it's scrambling for stakes rather than earning them organically.
What's particularly frustrating is how the film squanders its own premise. The moral and romantic tension that should drive the story—Vicky's ethical compromise, the deception's impact on his relationship with Neha—gets buried under layers of unnecessary scheming. There's a moment somewhere here for real commentary on class anxiety and the desperation of urban youth, but the screenplay never commits to it. Instead, we get a film that confuses plot mechanics with storytelling, where characters make decisions not because they make sense but because the narrative needs them to. The tonal inconsistency—wavering
Storyline
So this guy Vicky is basically broke and desperate to get his life together. He meets this girl Neha online, they hit it off, and decide they want to get married. Her dad is actually cool with it, but here's the catch—he wants Vicky to land a job within a week before he'll give them his blessing. Talk about pressure, right?
When Vicky finally manages to get a job interview with this wealthy guy named Armaan Kochar, things get really complicated. Armaan agrees to hire him, but only if Vicky agrees to some pretty sketchy conditions that involve Neha spending time with him. Vicky's freaking out, so he comes up with this wild plan to hire someone else to pretend to be Neha instead. Spoiler alert—this scheme doesn't exactly go smoothly.
Just when Vicky thinks he's managed to sort things out and get the apartment situation handled, everything blows up in his face. Armaan figures out what Vicky did and he's absolutely furious. Things go from bad to worse when Armaan suddenly goes missing, and wouldn't you know it, Vicky ends up being blamed for the whole thing. The guy can't catch a break!



