At its heart is Sunny Sanskari (Varun Dhawan) — a hopeless romantic with more emotion than sense, whose grand proposal goes hilariously wrong when his love Ananya (Sanya Malhotra) calls it a “situationship.” Enter Tulsi Kumari (Janhvi Kapoor) — a simple, soft-spoken schoolteacher nursing her own heartbreak. When the two decide to fake a romance and crash a lavish destination wedding, chaos, comedy, and chemistry follow in full Bollywood style.
Varun Dhawan is in fine form — funny, flamboyant, and full of heart. His comic timing meets real emotion, making Sunny both ridiculous and relatable. Janhvi Kapoor shines as Tulsi — tender, expressive, and quietly strong. She plays heartbreak with a raw honesty that lingers. Sanya Malhotra adds a layer of complexity to Ananya — a woman caught between desire and duty — while Rohit Saraf brings warmth and sincerity to his role. Maniesh Paul adds the perfect dose of madness.
Sure, the second half stumbles a bit — a few subplots stretch longer than needed — but the heart of the film never loses rhythm. It keeps you smiling, tapping your foot, and feeling that old familiar tug of filmy love.
Khaitan paints his story on a canvas of chandeliers, colours, and emotions. The film sparkles with classic romcom energy — witty dialogues, dreamy songs, dramatic slow-mos — yet there’s a self-aware charm that makes it feel fresh. It laughs at Bollywood clichés even as it lovingly celebrates them.
Sunny Sanskari Ki Tulsi Kumari isn’t just a romcom — it’s a mood. A reminder that no matter how much life changes, the magic of love, heartbreak, and second chances never goes out of style. It’s loud, colorful, and unabashedly emotional — and that’s what makes it work.(To an extent)
Favourite moments: Varun’s poetry, Janhvi’s tearful monologue, the “Bijuria” dance, and the alternate chemistry of both pairs..that says more than words ever could.
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