Teri Baaton Mein Aise Uljha Jiya Movie Review

Teri Baaton Mein Aise Uljha Jiya story: Unknowingly, a robotics engineer participates in a project to test a female robot that resembles a human. When he falls in love with her and can’t stop thinking about her, things change. Is it possible for a man and a machine to become companions and get married? The movie surprises and laughs its way into that zone.

Teri Baaton Mein Aise Uljha Jiya review: Artificial intelligence (AI) and its potential to replace human intelligence as a means of employment have been the talk of the town lately. This romantic comedy, written and directed by Amit Joshi and Aradhana Sah, investigates the veracity of the idea that a romance with a robot can exist.

To work on a new project for his boss and maasi, Urmila (Dimple Kapadia), robotics engineer Aryan Agnihotri (Shahid Kapoor) travels to the US. There, he is taken care of by her manager, the robot designed to make him fall in love with her, Sifra (Kriti Sanon). He does, too. He is furious to be used as a test subject in a lab, though, when he learns of her truth. He persuades his maasi to send her to India, though, because he is captivated to her and wants her to experience the ultimate test of surviving a large, dysfunctional Indian family that is fixated on Aryan’s marriage. What happens next in the story depends on whether he and the nearly ideal robot will have a happily ever after.

With a peculiar setting, Amit Joshi and Aradhana Sah present a fresh, lighthearted, and enjoyable notion. The jokes in this story come from the ridiculous circumstances that the human-robot pair runs into. The sequences where Aryan’s family warms up to Sifra are a bit strained, and the tale takes a while to get going. Following a major turn, the plot really takes off at the finish.

Romance is the main draw of the film, and Shahid Kapoor and Kriti Sanon have a fantastic on-screen connection. Kriti plays every scene when she stumbles in the human world with skill, and her poker-faced robotic performance and on-cue laughs are funny. Shahid effortlessly performs the part of an impertinent man who is madly in love. Dimple Kapadia is a delight to see, while Dharmendra is endearing as Shahid’s grandfather. The music by Sachin-Jigar, Tanishk Bagchi, and Mitraz is excellent, particularly the title track (a remix of Raghav’s Angel Eyes) and Laal Peeli Ankhiyan.

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Yaksheshwari

Yaksheshwari

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