
Veere Di Wedding
- Director
- Shashanka Ghosh
- Studio
- Balaji Motion PicturesSaffron Broadcast & Media
- Release Date
- 1 November 2018
- Running Time
- 130 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹42.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹139.00 Cr
Review
Kareena Kapoor Khan and her brigade of girlfriends finally deliver what the multiplex needed—a film that treats women's anxieties about marriage and relationships with both humor and genuine weight. Enuguron Kashyap's direction finds the sweet spot between frothy rom-com and meaningful character work; the writing doesn't shy away from real contradictions (a divorce lawyer afraid of marriage, a woman scarred by parental toxicity) without turning them into convenient plot devices. The performances sing—Kapoor is luminous and vulnerable, while Sonam Kapoor, Swara Bhaskar, and Shikha Talsania nail the rhythms of authentic female friendship with none of the saccharine posturing that usually ruins these ensemble pieces. The wedding-prep backdrop could've been superficial, but instead it becomes a legitimate crucible where each woman confronts her own demons.
Where the film falters is in its second half, when it trades satirical bite for sentimentality. The resolution with Meera's father feels unearned, and the climactic wedding sequence indulges in the exact kind of patriarchal theater that the film spent ninety minutes poking holes in. Some subplots (Sakshi's marital tension) remain maddeningly undercooked, and there are stretches where the screenplay confuses witty banter with actual plot momentum. Kashyap also can't quite resist the temptation to make Delhi look like a glossy Instagram filter rather than a real city. Still, this is ambitious, female-centric cinema that takes it
Storyline
So basically, there's this group of four super close girlfriends who are all dealing with their own messy relationship drama. Kalindi has been in a long-term relationship with her boyfriend in Australia and is totally anti-marriage because of her parents' toxic relationship, but he proposes anyway and she reluctantly agrees. Then you've got Avni, who's a divorce lawyer in Delhi—and ironically, handling all these breakup cases has made her absolutely terrified of getting married herself, even though her mom won't stop trying to set her up. It's honestly pretty ironic and funny.
The other two friends are struggling too. Sakshi is married but moved back with her parents for some mysterious reason that nobody fully understands at first. And then there's Meera, who married an American guy and had a kid with him, but her dad completely disowned her over it because he wasn't okay with the whole cross-cultural thing. So she's been dealing with this painful distance from her father while trying to build her own family life.
When Kalindi comes back to Delhi to prepare for her wedding, she ends up crashing with her uncle and his partner while her dad and his new wife try to help with the planning. The whole thing kind of brings all four friends together during this wedding preparation period, and Kalindi gets to see what a actually healthy, supportive family dynamic looks like when she spends time with Rishabh's family. It's a nice contrast to her own complicated home situation.




