Star Studio18, Venus Worldwide Entertainment and Abbas Mustan Film Production’s Kis Kisko Pyaar Karoon 2 (UA) is the second in the Kis Kisko Pyaar Karoon series. It is a comedy film about a man who is forced, by circumstances, to marry three girls.
Mohan (Kapil Sharma), a Hindu man, is in love with Saniya (Hira Warina), a Muslim girl. Due to communal differences, the two are unable to get married. By a quirk of fate, Mohan ends up marrying three girls — Ruhi (Ayesha Khan), Meera (Tridha Choudhury) and Jenny (Parul Gulati). How he balances his life between the three wives, each of who is unaware of his other two wives, forms the crux of the drama. Does Mohan ultimately marry Saniya, his true love?
Anukalp Goswami has written a fairly entertaining story which is farcical in nature. His screenplay moves at quite a fast pace and hence does not give the viewers time to think. The drama does get repetitive and appears too stretched at places, but the many twists and turns make up for that. Some portions look contrived. Anukalp Goswami’s dialogues are better than his story and screenplay. They are very entertaining and often evoke a lot of laughter.
Kapil Sharma acts ably and keeps the audience in laughter mode. Manjot Singh plays Mohan’s friend, Hubby, with complete conviction and is thoroughly entertaining. Hira Warina is natural as Saniya. Ayesha Khan looks pretty and acts quite well as Ruhi. Tridha Choudhury makes her mark as Meera; she is quite beautiful. Parul Gulati is natural as Jenny. Sushant Singh delivers a dignified performance as police officer DD. Akhilendra Mishra is lovely as Mohan’s father. Supriya Shukla has her moments as Mohan’s mother. Vipin Sharma is first-rate as Mirza. Smita Jayakar makes her mark as Zeenat. Jamie Lever is extraordinary in the role of Santosh and often brings the house down with laughter. Asrani is truly terrific as the Christian priest. Jimmy Moses makes his presence amply felt as the head of the eunuchs. Shrikant Verma (as PTI), Anil Charanjeet (as Mehmood) and Garima Kaushal (as Surleen) lend able support. Yashpal Sharma is good in a special appearance as Engineer Baba. Ginni Kapil Sharma, the real-life wife of Kapil Sharma, provides entertainment value by her mere presence as Ginni, in a special appearance. Master Aarav Rakesh Jain is nice as Rizwan. Others do as desired.
Anukalp Goswami’s direction is fairly good. He has narrated the drama in an engrossing way. Music is quite good. The Phurr song (composed by Yo Yo Honey Singh; written by Raj Brar) is a hit number while the other songs (composed by DigV, Yug Bhusal and Parikshit-Nishadh; lyrics by Lavraj, Ajay Kumar and Vimal Kashyap) are quite okay. The picturisation of the Phurr song (by Mihir Gulati) is appealing. Other song picturisations (by Raju Khan, Shabina Khan and Rhythm Sanadhya) are alright. Parikshit Sharma and Nishadh Chandra’s background music is impactful. Ravi Yadav’s camerawork is proper. Action scenes (by Abbas Ali Moghul) are functional. Production designing (Ashok Lokhare and Rucha Mayekar) and art direction (Sachin Patil) are appropriate. Hussain A. Burmawala’s editing is sharp.
On the whole, Kis Kisko Pyaar Karoon 2 is a fair entertainer, but its dull start is a dampener. The strong opposition of Dhurandhar and the expected impending onslaught (next week) of Avatar: Fire And Ash will not give any time to the film to breathe.
Released on 12-12-’25 at Inox (daily 4 shows) and other cinemas of Bombay by JioStar India Pvt. Ltd. Publicity: good. Opening: dull. …….Also released all over. Opening was weak almost everywhere.
