
Mujhse Dosti Karoge!
- Director
- Kunal Kohli
- Studio
- Yash Raj Films
- Release Date
- 9 August 2002
- Running Time
- 148 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹12.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹33.00 Cr
Review
Nitin Kakkar's *Mujhse Dosti Karoge!* is a film that works precisely because it understands the difference between a high-concept premise and a genuinely felt emotional core. The premise itself—a fifteen-year email deception masquerading as romance—could easily have collapsed into melodrama or farce, yet the director steers it toward something surprisingly poignant. What rescues this film from its own artifice is the unwavering sincerity of its performances. Hrithik Roshan brings an almost vulnerable earnestness to Raj, never winking at the audience, while Kareena Kapoor's Tina strikes the delicate balance between complicity and her own confusion. But it's Rani Mukerji who carries the emotional weight—Pooja's quiet suffering, her self-sacrifice dressed up as loyalty, becomes the film's beating heart. The chemistry between her and Roshan crackles precisely because the script acknowledges what unspoken proximity over years can create.
Where the film occasionally stumbles is in pacing and the resolution of its central conflict. The second half, once the truth emerges, relies heavily on convenient plot mechanics and family drama that feel somewhat transplanted from routine Bollywood playbooks. The screenplay doesn't quite trust its own sophistication enough to sit longer in moral ambiguity—it needs to resolve, to explain, to make everyone comfortable. Still, there's something refreshingly honest about a film that takes its own romantic delusion seriously enough to make it hurt.
Storyline
So basically, there are these three childhood friends—Raj, Tina, and Pooja—and Raj's totally smitten with Tina. When Raj moves to London, he wants to keep their connection alive through emails, but Tina's too lazy to actually write back herself, so she convinces Pooja to do it for her. Pooja agrees, and before you know it, she's pouring her heart out in these emails while pretending to be Tina. Over the years, Raj falls for whoever's on the other end of those messages without ever seeing a photo, so he has no clue it's actually Pooja.
Fast forward fifteen years, and Raj comes back to India wanting to finally meet the girl he's been writing to all this time. When he sees Tina again, he automatically assumes she's the one who's been his pen pal this whole time, so he starts falling for her instead. Tina knows the truth but goes along with it, and pretty soon their families are planning their engagement. Meanwhile, Pooja's stuck watching the guy she loves with someone else, keeping her feelings bottled up to protect everyone.
Here's where things get interesting—Raj eventually figures out the whole mystery when Pooja does something that gives her away, and suddenly everything clicks into place. He realizes Pooja's the one he's actually been connected to all along and tells her how he really feels. But then life throws a curveball that makes everything way more complicated, and the characters have to decide what matters most to them.

