Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham..

Yashovardhan Raichand
(Amitabh Bachchan) and his wife Nandini (Jaya Bachchan) have raised
their sons Rahul (Shah Rukh Khan) and Rohan (Hrithik Roshan)
showering them with love and affection. Yash has tried to pass on to
his sons the values, the heritage and the rich traditions of his
family.
Nandini on the other hand has different dreams and
aspirations for her sons. Her own dreams of love, which she would
like her sons to experience. Both her sons, but more so Rahul as she
shares a special bond with him. An unusual bond that enables her to
feel him even when he is not around and which will help her live
through the torturous years when he leaves the house. One that has
been cultivated with love for a child that was not meant to be and
who brought laughter and happiness into her empty world. A child who
was adopted.
Rahul's adoption has always been kept a secret.
A topic that was forbidden to be discussed in the Raichand
household. But ever since Rahul himself found out at the tender age
of 8 years, it has been the reason for his unending devotion and
gratitude for his parents - especially his father. His father's
every word, every wish becomes an unwritten commandment for him. One
that he would never break, but unfortunately does. Because Rahul
falls in love.
Rahul falls in love with Anjali (Kajol) a
bubbly girl from Delhi's Chandni Chowk, who dotes on her little
sister Pooja (Kareena Kapoor) and cares madly about her ailing
father Bauji (Alok Nath). A simple girl whom Rahul marries and
brings home. A girl whom his father will never approve of. A girl
that makes a proud stubborn man forget that he is a father and
reminds a son that he is adopted.
Review The
much-awaited K3G may not boast of thematic novelty, but certainly
stands out for the manner of its presentation, and array of the
cream of Bollywood.
Of course, Karan has become a better
director since his �Kuch Kuch Hota Hai� days. The maturity shows in
K3G, which is polished in its look, richer in content and has an
engaging plot.
With the most attractive starcast in the
Bollywood, Karan delineates a typical happy Indian family where
parents are not prejudiced between their adopted son and their own
son. Perhaps, Karan could have tried to prevent it from becoming a
bit too mushy.
The scintillating pair of Amitabh and Jaya
Bachchan (onscreen after such a long gap) engages the viewer
considerably.
While Jaya Bachchan looks unmatchable in the
role in which she has seldom been seen, Amitabh�s role of a stern
patriarch (who demands strict principles and morals from his
children) is reminiscent of the one he did in �Ek Rishta� and
�Mohabbatein�.
On the same footing are the Shah Rukh
Khan-Kajol jodi, who reminds one of the successful pairings
of films like �Baazigar�, �DDLJ� and �KKHH�. On the other hand, the
romance between Anjali and Rahul lacked freshness.
The
Hrithik-Kareena pair also revives the images from the Subhash Ghai�s
�Yaadein�. Hrithik looks handsome and plays the emotive Rohan with
ease. Kareena too is convincing playing a high-on-attitude, MTV bred
yuppie.
However, talented Rani Mukherji almost goes
unnoticed with a low-profile role.
Adding to K3G�s strength
is its mellifluous music score by three different music directors
Jatin-Lalit duo, Sandesh Shandiliya and Aadesh Shrivastava.
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