
Saiyaara
Romance Drama Hindi
Short-tempered musician Krish is paired with a no-nonsense lyricist in Vaani, for the music company to work together. The sparks fly and Krish and Vaani get close and so much that they didn't anticipate. Will their love story stand the test of time, egos, and, more importantly, become bigger than themselves?
Cast: | Ahaan Panday, Aneet Padda, Varun Badola, Alam Khan, Geeta Agrawal Sharma, Rajesh Kumar |
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Director: | Mohit Suri |
Editor: | Rohit Makwana |
Camera: | Vikas Sivaraman |

Guild Reviews

Emotional rollercoaster about selfless love

(Written for The Common Man Speaks)
Over the last several years, mainstream Hindi cinema has been guilty of showing more than half or at least half of the film in the trailer itself. When the promo of Mohit Suri’s Saiyaara and the video of its title song came out, it gave a feeling about the film being in the Kabir Singh zone about a frustrated lover living a toxic life. However, as it turns out, the film is nothing like that. It’s hugely different from its trailer. In fact, it’s one of the rare mainstream Hindi film to completely hide its main plot. Saiyaara is based in today’s era in Mumbai. It revolves around a hot-headed and arrogant struggling singer and musician Krish Kapoor (Ahaan Panday), who is a part of a music group. He once roughs up the editor of a digital publication for mentioning only one person’s name from their band in their review of their album despite he being the lead singer. During this time, he comes across Vaani Batra (Aneet Padda), as aspiring journalist who was there for a job interview.
An aching love story that dials the emotion high with a few weaker plot points


Love to forget

Directed by Mohit Suro, Saiyaara is a love story that seems to exist solely within the realm of cinema. Where else can you see a character stating, “Dil se banaya gaana hain, feelings hain isme” (The song is crafted from the heart, it embodies emotions) with a straight face and in all seriousness? Or lines like, “Tumse milne ke baad mera dard beh gaya” (My sorrows have washed away after meeting you), as Vani Batra expresses to Krish Kapoor.

Mohit Suri romance offers familiar gloom and doom

Every generation deserves its Aashiqui, if only to show that audiences here will never tire of morose musicians neglecting their mental health and then singing about it. The crowd at my Friday morning screening mostly comprised college kids. Invariably, there was a good bit of wisecracking and talking back to the screen. But when it was time for the big concert number, many of them had their phones out and recording. Saiyaara, directed by Mohit Suri for Yash Raj Films, actually began life as a third Aashiqui that never worked out. It isn’t a Bhatt production, but it’s a Bhatt film in spirit. Which is to say, it’s gloomy, emotionally charged, self-flagellating, and full of hummable rock ballads that all sound the same. Pitching a song to a popstar, aspiring singer Krish (Ahaan Panday) sets to music a partially written poem by fledgling writer Vaani (Aneet Padda), whom he barely knows. They’re hired to work on it together (I winced when he snatches her notebook as she’s working—a move that would earn you the lifelong enmity of any real writer). Initially, they seem to reinforce each other’s sadness. He has an alcoholic father and a massive chip on his shoulder; she was dumped by her fiancée on their wedding day. But as the song takes shape, they start to trust, then encourage, each other. She opens up, he calms down, they grow closer.

Finally, A Love Story to Remember

When asked about his ear for aspirational sadboi soundtracks, director Mohit Suri correctly deduced that viewers tend to recall the songs from his movies more than the movies themselves. It’s a skill in mainstream Bollywood, of course, especially in an age where Hindi film music is going extinct as a screenwriting and narrative-shaping tool. But the opposite has held true for Suri’s vessels like Zeher (2005), Awarapan (2007), Woh Lamhe (2006), Malang (2020), Hamari Adhuri Kahani (2015) and most of all, Ek Villain (2014); the albums were so addictive that the storytelling often felt like it was biding time and filling space between songs. Aashiqui 2 (2013), that lilting A Star Is Born adaptation, came the closest to being remembered through its tunes, not for it.

Ahaan Panday and Aneet Padda make this bittersweet romance sparkle

After delivering logs of deadwood, Mohit Suri, who loves to paint doomed romance on celluloid, returns to his Aashiqui roots with a fresh coat of mush whose ebbs and flows make one feel volatile and vulnerable in equal measure. An uplifting tale of unalloyed love whose pathos leaves its soot on the young souls, Saiyaaracarries the brooding intensity of a Mahesh Bhatt romance in the body of a maudlin Yash Raj love story. With mental health as the villain of the piece, the story echoes the times when love is reduced to a lollipop by market forces. In the digital age, Mohit dials back to the pre-rom-com era, when heartache travelled through the screen on the wings of melodies, sacrifice was considered a virtue, and selfless love was celebrated. Led by Irshad Kamil’s Saiyaara mera badla nahin hai, Mausam thoda badla hua hai (My love, you are the same, only the time has turned its back on us), the tripping soundtrack, put together by five composers, grows on your senses.

Ahaan Panday and Aneet Padda make a promising debut in Mohit Suri’s cliché love story

Bollywood is going back to classic romances after years and it feels refreshing. The audiences in the past month have been treated to love stories and anthologies in Anurag Basu’s Metro In Dino and Vivek Soni’s Aap Jaisa Koi recently, and now Mohit Suri’s Saiyaara focuses on young love. Suri, who has made a name for creating musicals and angsty love stories, returns to his comfort zone and collaborates for the first time with Yash Raj Films- another name synonymous with Bollywood romances. The film marks the debut of Ahaan Panday and Aneet Padda and looks and feels like Aashiqui 3 with similar romantic ballads, drama, angst, and love. But is Saiyaara a Gen Z version of Aashiqui? Let’s find out.

परफेक्ट नहीं, पर प्यारी है अहान और अनीत की ये 'आशिकी'

‘सैयारा मतलब तारों में इक तन्हा तारा, खुद जलकर जो रोशन कर दे जग ये सारा।’ यह डायलॉग है, दर्द-ए-दिल की कहानियों के महारथी हो चुके डायरेक्टर मोहित सूरी की नई फिल्म ‘सैयारा’ का। इश्क में खुद को मिटाकर अपने प्यार को रोशन करने वाले ऐसे सैयाराओं की कहानी मोहित ‘आशिकी 2’ के जमाने से सुनाते आ रहे हैं। यह फिल्म भी उसी की नई कड़ी है, जिसमें प्यार, दर्द और सुरीले गानों का कॉकटेल है। साथ ही अहान पांडे (चंकी पांडे के भतीजे) और अनीत पड्डा के रूप में दो नए चेहरों की ताजगी भरी केमिस्ट्री भी। कहानी की कमी-बेसी के बावजूद मोहित का प्यार का यह दांव इस बार भी सही ही बैठा है। कहानी संगीत की दुनिया में चमकने का सपना देखने वाले एक उभरते हुए कलाकार कृष कपूर (अहान पांडे) की है। अहान के एंट्री शॉट से ही साफ हो जाता है कि वह ‘आशिकी 2’ के आरजे और ‘रॉकस्टार’ के जेजे टाइप बेपरवाह, गुस्सैल, सिगरेट के कश खींचने वाला बंदा है। जबकि, उसके उलट वाणी बत्रा (अनीत पड्डा) एक शांत, समझदार, खुद में गुमसुम रहने वाली लड़की है, जो हाल ही में एक दर्दनाक ब्रेकअप से बाहर आई है। हां, टैलंटेड दोनों खूब हैं।
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