Stupidities) is a 2014 Indian Hindi-language romantic comedy film directed by Nupur Asthana, written by Habib Faisal and produced by Aditya Chopra under the banner of Yash Raj Films.
It was released on 14 March 2014 to mixed reviews, and emerged a commercial failure.
Sehgal (Rishi Kapoor), a Government Officer, is nearing his retirement.
Mohit sells his car, and gives Myra her money back, and they break-up.
Mohit leaves his apartment, rents a smaller place, and joins a cafe.
Myra tells her dad that it is enough, and Mohit is a National Level under 16 silver medalist in squash but still kept losing to V.K.
She tells him that she does not have fun shopping without him because there is nobody to say, "Very Hot, Khaa Jau Tere Ko".
prepares for the interview in a suit with four pockets, then changes clothes, and goes to Mohit's apartment to get a tie.
[8][9] The soundtrack was composed by Raghu Dixit, while the lyrics were penned by Anvita Dutt, except where noted.
Dixit was the music composer for Asthana's last film, Mujhse Fraaandship Karoge.
[12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20] Taran Adarsh of Bollywood Hungama praised it, saying the film was a "pleasant surprise" with "super performances of [sic] Rishi, Ayushmann and Sonam, watertight writing, skilled direction and dollops of humor."
[12] Saibal Chatterjee in his review for NDTV described the film to score "with its disarming simplicity" thereby "never less than watchable".
[13] Tushar Joshi reviewing for Daily News and Analysis stated it to miss out on the "opportunity to be smarter and funnier" by playing "too safe to rise above the ordinary".
[14] Madhureeta Mukherjee in her review for The Times of India stated the film to have its share of beauty but falters with a helpless script".
[15] According to Rajeev Masand of CNN-IBN, ″Asthana directs with an easy hand, but she's saddled with a dead duck of a script that simply can't be saved.″[21] In a review for Hindustan Times by Anupama Chopra stated, "This is one of those films that doesn't either offend or engage.
"[22] Rahul Desai of the Mumbai Mirror wrote ″This is the kind of middling film that one doesn't know what to make of.
All she needs is an ambitious screenplay and a voice—perhaps her own?″[23] Danny Bowes from RogerEbert.com gave it , writing, ″The movie is perfectly acceptable middle-of-the-road romantic comedy material, and for fans of such things it should certainly hit the spot.″[24] The New York Times critic Andy Webster wrote "This tale of a yuppie couple (played by Ayushmann Khurrana and Sonam Kapoor) flirts with intriguing notions of recessionary struggle, though strained, contrived humour bogs it down...
It is the question of money's influence on passion and relationships that gives Ms. Asthana's movie what dramatic traction it has.