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Aap Jaisa Koi: A Charming Heady Cocktail  

Rating; ***1/2

Since this  is  a Karan Johar production, there are bound to be  people who deserve love in each other’s company. Shrinenu Tirupathi and Madhu Bose are Ashok Kumar and Madhubala,Sanskrit and  French,  or maybe Jamshedpur and  Kolkata, the two cities that Vivek Soni’s  souffle-biryani travels through.

 Srinu and  Madhu are   not as young as  Ibrahim Ali Khan and Khushi Kapoor  in Nadaaniyaan(and definitely not that foolish) , though not as old as Dharmendra  and Shabana Azmi in Rocky Are Rani Kii Prem Kahaani.

  Shrinenu  and Madhu are…one of their kind , not exactly  made  for each  other. It is their determination to find a  common ground that makes this the “cute  girl, nerdy boy asli romcom”.

 The  bang-on description comes  from the  film’s excellent dialogue writers. The  conversations  sound lived-in and ….well, if not  a hundred percent real then close . The characters  whip up a constant  bustle without crowding the  canvas.

But the  cynosure remains the Madhu-Srini relationship.Will they, won’t they?….It’s a lovely little naughty  yarn with  loads of  genuine  feelings. True,  towards the second-half it begins to take itself too seriously , especially when Srini’s Bhabhi Kusum (the excellent Ayesha Raza) breaks free  of  a stifling marriage with Bhanu(Manish Chaudhary who  excels in playing the patriarchal bully)  to find ‘True Love’, whatever  that be. (How does she know it isn’t just gas that makes her heart leaden, Aditya Roy Kapoor was heard asking in Metro In Dino lately).

 There is  well-planned elaborate conference-room interlude of reckoning where  Ayesha Raza speaks on centuries of patriarchal  tyranny. More than Manish Chaudhary’s  take-it-on-the-chin patriarchy Bhanu I was intrigued  by his best friend  Pramod(Sanjeev Wilson) who  hangs around  at  every meal in  his  friend’s household. Is he meant to be Bhanu’s secret love life?

 This is  not quite the time and place for gender-equality lectures.  But the film survives  the extraneous  onslaught on its lighthearted mood. Even as the mood gets  excessively  preachy,we  never stop cheering for Srini and  Madhu who are so oldschool, they seem a refreshing departure from the  shallow woke-ness  of young love.

One reason why  the couple  is so  likeable is that they are played by Madhavan and Fatima Sana  Shaikh,  two actors who  are constantly pushing their vanity aside to play vulnerable broken but repairable  characters.  They lose some, but they are winsome.

This is Fatima’s second  admirable  plunge into a damaged character   after  Metro In Dino.

As  for Madhavan, he  is going through the most productive  phase of his career. Aap Jaisa Koi  gives him the  opportunity to sink into a part with plenty of blind spots. But the character is willing to work on his weaknesses. Yup,there is  no  shame in being a  40-year old  virgin , even if his best friend (Namit Das, pitch perfect) thinks  otherwise. Kick in  your balls, bro!

Director Vivek Soni’s concoction is not free of flaws. But the characters  seem more interesting because of them.  This romance between a Sanskrit teacher and  a French tutor is  Netflix’s  atonement for recent sins.

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