
Rocky Aur Rani Kii Prem Kahaani
- Director
- Karan Johar
- Studio
- Dharma ProductionsViacom18 Studios
- Release Date
- 27 July 2023
- Running Time
- 168 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹160.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹355.61 Cr
Review
Karan Johar's latest is a film that understands something fundamental about modern love—that compatibility isn't just about chemistry, it's about the courage to step into someone else's world and genuinely *see* them. Rocky and Rani's three-month experiment of living in each other's homes is the heart of this story, and it's handled with surprising tenderness. Ranveer Singh brings infectious energy to Rocky, though he occasionally tips into caricature with the Punjabi mannerisms; Alia Bhatt, however, is luminous as Rani, capturing both her character's sharp intellect and the vulnerability beneath her glamorous exterior. Their performances together have moments of genuine warmth that transcend the contrived setup.
What truly moved me was the parallel storyline of Rocky's grandfather—a quiet ache runs through scenes where he searches for his lost love, and it grounds the film's central theme beautifully. The direction revels in cultural details, from Bengali poetry to Punjabi celebrations, creating a visual and emotional landscape where these worlds feel distinct yet not dismissive of each other. Yet the film stumbles when it prioritizes spectacle over subtlety; some songs feel obligatory rather than organic, and the resolution, while heartfelt, arrives a bit too neatly given the messiness the film spent so long building.
This is Johar working within his comfort zone—lavish production design, designer clothes, family drama—but with a genuine emotional core about bridging divi
Storyline
So okay, there's this guy Rocky from this super rich Punjabi family that owns this massive sweets business, right? His grandpa has this whole romantic mystery happening—he keeps thinking he sees this woman from his past, and Rocky basically becomes a detective trying to figure out what's going on. Turns out his grandpa had this whole secret love story decades ago, and Rocky's determined to help him reconnect with her.
While Rocky's on this mission, he meets Rani, who's this glamorous Bengali news anchor and totally the opposite of him in every way. Her family is all about arts and intellectualism, while his family is basically old money and tradition. They start getting close because of the whole grandpa situation, and before you know it, they're actually falling for each other, even though they're like night and day.
Here's where it gets interesting—instead of just ignoring their crazy different backgrounds, Rocky and Rani decide to actually move into each other's homes for three months to really understand where the other person is coming from. It's this whole thing about bridging the gap between their totally opposite worlds, and spoiler alert, it gets pretty messy and beautiful and emotional. Trust me, it's the kind of film that makes you believe in love even when it seems impossible!
