
Main Aur Mr. Riight
- Director
- Adeeb Rais
- Studio
- Pooja Gujral
- Release Date
- 11 December 2014
- Running Time
- 130 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹4.25 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹0.39 Cr
Review
Anubhav Sinha's "Main Aur Mr. Riight" attempts a familiar Bollywood formula—the hired boyfriend premise—but stumbles in execution where it matters most. The central conceit has potential: a successful casting director paying a struggling actor to pose as her ideal partner creates inherent dramatic irony that *should* generate both comedy and emotional stakes. However, the screenplay fails to mine genuine conflict from this setup. Instead, we get a meandering narrative that confuses subplot proliferation with character development. The truth-or-dare sequence that supposedly catalyzes the climax feels narratively cheap, arriving too late and resolving too quickly. Tara Sutaria brings competence to Alia, though she's asked to carry emotional beats the script hasn't earned, while Arjun Kapoor's Sukhi wavers between charming underdog and convenient plot device. The supporting cast—their relationship crises—dilutes rather than enriches the core story.
What ultimately derails the film is tonal inconsistency and lazy writing. Director Sinha has proven technical capability ("Natarang," "Mulk"), but here he seems disengaged from the material itself. The romance doesn't crackle because neither character makes consequential choices—things simply happen to them. The social commentary about matrimonial pressure, briefly glimpsed, never crystallizes into anything meaningful. At barely 90 minutes, the film somehow feels both rushed and bloated, prioritizing setup over payoff. The box office
Storyline
So there's this super successful casting director named Alia living in Mumbai who thinks she's got everything figured out—the perfect career, amazing friends, you name it. The only problem is she's still single, and literally all her friends who are married, engaged, or dating won't stop pestering her about finding someone. Fed up with everyone meddling in her love life, Alia decides to take matters into her own hands in the most unconventional way possible.
She ends up hiring this struggling actor named Sukhi, who's from Punjab but grew up in Delhi and is desperate for his big break. Alia basically pays him to pretend to be her ideal boyfriend—a guy named Hridhaan—so she can finally get her friends to back off. At first, Sukhi's kind of a fish out of water trying to play this polished character, but somehow he manages to charm literally everyone around Alia and they all start vibing with him.
Here's where things get messy—Sukhi's genuine personality starts making Alia's friends actually confront all the problems in their own relationships. Everything comes to a head when secrets get spilled during a game of truth or dare, and suddenly Alia finds herself in this complicated situation with feelings all tangled up. The whole fake boyfriend scheme starts unraveling in ways nobody expected, and everyone's got to deal with the consequences of their choices.



