Humpty Sharma Ki Dulhania Review |link| May 2026

Visually, the film is a sugar rush of bright colors, shopping montages, and songs that became anthems ( Saturday Saturday , Samjhawan ). The music by Sharib-Toshi and the legendary R.D. Burman (for a remixed classic) is infectious, even if it occasionally overpowers the quieter emotional beats.

Where the film falters is in its supporting cast and tonal imbalance. The villains are cardboard cutouts—the possessive fiancé (an underutilized Siddharth Shukla) has no personality beyond being wealthy and jealous. The comedy, while often hilarious, sometimes veers into crass, juvenile territory, particularly in the second half. Furthermore, the film’s attempt to modernize DDLJ’s moral code creates a contradictory mess: it champions a girl’s right to choose, but still relies on the hero seeking the father’s permission, muddying its own progressive waters. humpty sharma ki dulhania review

The plot is refreshingly simple. Kavya (Alia Bhatt), a spirited girl from Ambala, is about to enter an arranged marriage to a settled NRI. She has one wish: to find her favorite designer lehenga in Delhi. Enter Humpty (Varun Dhawan), a loud, charismatic, and slightly aimless Punjabi boy who becomes her guide, her partner-in-crime, and eventually, her heart’s conflict. The narrative follows every predictable beat—from the “fake engagement” to the confrontational scene with the angry father—but it does so with such unapologetic energy that the familiarity feels less like a flaw and more like a feature. Visually, the film is a sugar rush of