Love per Square Foot

Love per Square Foot

N/AFeature film soundtrack
Director
Anand Tiwari
Studio
RSVP Movies
Release Date
13 February 2018
Running Time
133 min
Language
Hindi
Country
India

Cast

Review

5/10Critic Score

Anubhav Sinha's "Love per Square Foot" attempts to tackle a genuinely relevant subject—the housing crisis and societal rigidity around unmarried couples—but the execution is frustratingly uneven. The premise has teeth: two bank employees, each drowning in their own relationship quicksand, decide to buy an apartment together as a practical solution. It's a smart, modern setup that could've made for sharp social commentary. However, the film squanders this potential by oscillating between heavy-handed moralizing and rom-com clichés that feel borrowed from a dozen forgettable Bollywood templates. Vicky Kaushal and Angira Dhar are earnest enough in their performances, but they're working with a script that doesn't trust its own intelligence—constantly spelling out themes rather than letting them breathe naturally.

What rankles most is how the film loses nerve precisely when it should dig deeper. The societal resistance to their arrangement could've been a genuine exploration of urban India's hypocrisy, but instead we get melodramatic family confrontations and forced romantic tension that undermines the story's core argument. Sinha's direction, usually assured, feels tentative here—he can't decide whether this is a problem-picture or a feel-good romance, so he attempts both and masters neither. The supporting cast is wasted, the climax predictable, and worst of all, the film ultimately settles for a conventional resolution that betrays its own progressive premise.

Rating: 5/10

Arjun Nair, Bollyhits ↗

Storyline

So this movie is basically about two coworkers at a bank who are both stuck in pretty messy personal situations. Sanjay is this IT guy who's caught up with his boss in a complicated affair, while she won't actually commit to leaving her husband. Meanwhile, Kareena's got her own problems—she's engaged to someone she's not really into, and her mom keeps shooting down her dreams of getting her own place. They're both just feeling trapped and frustrated with their lives, you know?

Then Sanjay stumbles upon this affordable housing program and thinks, why not ask Kareena to partner up with him? She's actually into it, and they decide to go for it together. It seems like the perfect solution to both their problems, right? Like maybe this could help them break free from all the drama holding them back.

But here's where it gets interesting—buying an apartment together when they're not actually married turns out to be way more complicated than they expected. The film follows them as they navigate all these obstacles and societal issues that come with being an unmarried couple trying to own property. It's a pretty relatable story if you think about the real challenges young people face today.

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