
The 2-hour game-play between these youngsters misrepresented as today's youth is what the film is essentially about. Dharam hopes that he can maybe start scoring, starting from Shyra, but is internally crestfallen to learn that the fun they had the previous night was just a one-time thingummy for Shyra, a professional travel guide who moonlights as garcon at her parents' rotisserie. They bump into each other at a rave party in Paris and immediately indulge in wham bam thank you ma'am. Shyra (Vaani Kapoor) is a young, carefree, and promiscuous French woman born to Indian restaurateurs while Dharam (Ranveer Singh) is a comedian from Delhi who has final-stage satyriasis. Clearly evident in this ritzy romance drama. He first started throwing up his ideas in 1995, and it took him close to two decades to finally get the people to understand that his interpretations are awfully wrong. On the whole, 'Befikre' is high on hype, but low on substance.Īditya Chopra has issues with understanding love and relationships. Both the actors have done well, but sadly, the script lets them down.

He keeps the narrative going! Vaani Kapoor is very natural & shares a nice on-screen chemistry with Ranveer. He nails every nuance of Dharam & also delivers the best laughs. Performance-Wise: Ranveer Singh is the sole saving grace. Cinematography & Vishal-Shekhar's Score, merit a special mention. 'Befikre' finds him limping & that's sad. Aditya Chopra's Direction is just about okay. Aditya Chopra's Writing is breezy initially & some scenes are fun in the first-hour, but as mentioned before, the second-hour is devoid of excitement. In short, 'Befikre' makes an attempt to make modern love look daring & rather impulsive, but the result, is underwhelming. The addition of a new man in the leading lady's life, is clichéd & the series of events that follow, are tiresomely predictable. Its the second-hour, however, that fails completely. Despite these pumps, the first-hour still keeps the energy coming. But sooner than expected, the dares between them come across as silly & their differences appear plastic. 'Befikre' begins in a fun way & watching the protagonists indulge in lust rather than love, is interesting. Doused in the spirit of Paris, they celebrate love, sex and focus on living life to the fullest. 'Befikre' Synopsis: After a coincidence, Dharam and Shyra (Ranveer Singh & Vaani Kapoor) meet & indulge in impulsive, engaging series of experiences. Too many dares, very few laughs & a dragging second-hour, play a spoilsport. Writer-Director Aditya Chopra fails to deliver a tale on Modern Love.
