Sita at Home) is a 1996 Indian Tamil-language romantic drama film directed by Agathiyan, starring Karthik, Suvalakshmi and Karan.
When Nila returns to her hostel, she finds the tape to have more info into it and hears a whining Mohan's marriage proposal.
Nila takes sympathy towards Mohan and meets him at a beach and lays down her rules straight: She would fall in love, but only after marriage, and she is determined to be behind the success of the man she marries.
While Nila takes a hiatus and visits home, her mother informs her that their family doctor friend is interested in marrying her.
When Rishi passes the letter through a drunk stranger to Nila on the night before her wedding, she shows it to her doctor groom.
Mohan tells his parents that Rishi is his boss and he gave the house as a gift for their upcoming wedding.
Mohan's parents speak ill of Rishi and sarcastically suggest him to marry Nila since he gave her a ride in the middle of the night.
Mohan changes his mind soon and asks Rishi to drop Nila back off at the wedding hall.
He offers to drop Nila off at the wedding hall, but she hesitates to go back, worrying about her sister's future.
Rishi tells Mohan that he should have fired him for what he did the previous night but lets him stay due to his family debts.
Rishi later takes Nila to a party where his friends mistake her for a call girl and embarrass her by asking her price per night.
The pimp visits Rishi at his home the next day and is surprised to see Nila in and congratulates him on his conquest.
A gossip fight within the office premise between Mohan and a colleague leads Rishi to intervene and stop.
His father agrees, but, when he privately talks to Nila, he asks her a question that upsets her, and she leaves the house.
He bids goodbye and leaves as Nila stops him, she cries and apologizes that she mistook Rishi to be a jerk like Mohan when he sent his father to speak on his behalf but now realizes that he did it out of respect for her.
[5] The film was remade in Telugu as Gokulamlo Seeta,[6] in Kannada as Krishna Leele,[7] and in Hindi as Hum Ho Gaye Aapke.