The premise is deceptively simple: Alia’s Alia (yes, the character is also named Alia) is a insomniac heiress. Shahid’s Jagjinder Joginder—aka JJ—is a graphic designer who also suffers from sleeplessness, hired to plan her lavish wedding in Poland. They meet cute in an airport and bond over their shared, existential alertness at 3 AM. The film’s central metaphor—finding love in the loneliest, most awake hours—is genuinely lovely. For about twenty minutes, Shaandaar hums with offbeat promise.
But inside the film, they are anchors of boredom. You realize, watching Shaandaar , that Trivedi composed songs for a much better, much more energetic movie. The picturizations are flat, repetitive, and devoid of the chemistry they’re supposed to sell. Shahid and Alia, two of the most instinctive actors of their generation, dance beautifully but feel like strangers forced to smile for a destination wedding photographer. The music doesn’t elevate the story; it exposes the void where the story should be.
Let’s talk about the music, because it’s both the film’s greatest asset and its most damning indictment. The soundtrack— Gulaabo , Shaam Shaandaar , Senti Wali Feeling —is a masterclass in textured, euphoric pop. Amit Trivedi’s production is lush, quirky, and addictive. For weeks before the release, these songs were the soundtrack to a generation’s monsoon. shaandaar -2015-
Watch the music video for Gulaabo . Then take a nap. You’ll have experienced the best of Shaandaar without the 144-minute wedding hangover.
What audiences got instead was a cinematic insomnia cure: a film so tonally bewildering, so narratively inert, that it became less a romantic comedy and more a case study in what happens when style cannibalizes substance. The premise is deceptively simple: Alia’s Alia (yes,
Here’s a critical piece on Shaandaar (2015), framing it as one of Bollywood’s most fascinating failures—a film that promised sparkle but delivered a strangely melancholic hangover. Shaandaar (2015): When the Wedding Wasn’t the Only Thing That Needed Saving
Then the wedding guests arrive.
Shaandaar was a box-office disaster, and it effectively derailed Vikas Bahl’s directorial momentum for years. But why does it still haunt the conversation? Because it’s not aggressively bad in the way of a Humshakals or a Tees Maar Khan . It’s a quiet bad—a film that seduces you with its soundtrack and its leads, then leaves you stranded in a banquet hall where the DJ has packed up and the guests have gone home.
Shaandaar isn’t a failure of talent. It’s a failure of vision—a film that confused aesthetic excess for emotional truth. It remains, years later, a fascinating, beautiful, and utterly exhausting nap. You realize, watching Shaandaar , that Trivedi composed
The film lurches into a bizarre, hyper-stylized satire of rich, dysfunctional families. Pankaj Kapur (Shahid’s real-life father) plays a deadpan, fortune-hunting patriarch. Sanjay Kapoor is a muscle-flexing buffoon. And then there’s the father-daughter boxing match. And the oddly incestuous undertones of the rival family. The screenplay, co-written by Bahl and Chaitally Parmar, mistakes volume for wit, and caricature for comedy. Scenes don’t build; they just… happen. The wedding planning is forgotten. The insomnia is forgotten. The romance becomes a series of music videos strung together by awkward silences.