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nurag Kashyap’s Manmarziyaan is not just another love triangle that puts forth two oft-abused options – carefree excitement and routine stability – in front of its female lead. It dismantles just about everything we’re conditioned to believe about how we love, fed through sugarcoated Bollywood romance; a throbbing manifesto of modern love that threatens to unravel the inadequacies of romance. Set in Amritsar, it revolves around Rumi (an electric Tapsee Pannu), a gutsy 20-something orphan who is in love with Vicky Sandhu aka DJ Sandz (the inimitable Vicky Kaushal), the neighbourhood drifter. They have the kind of passionate, all-consuming romance that inevitably sets the universal standard for how “true” love should make us feel – equally soul-crushing during its highs and lows. Trouble brews when the lovers are discovered by Rumi’s extended family. Their instant disapproval of her unambitious lover forces her to devise an ultimatum: If he doesn’t ask for her hand the next day, she’ll marry whoever they pick. Of course, he doesn’t show up. Nor does he transform into a dependable lover overnight. In a tragi-comic scene that highlights the latter, Rumi changes her mind about eloping with Vicky, a few minutes after they’ve already left. Sensing that he will always be indifferent to life’s practicalities, Rumi gives him an earful about how he shits all over responsibilities. Her grievances don’t shock Vicky, who subverts the “macho hero” trope by being aware of his weaknesses. His face registers a shade of puppy-hurt, as he tells her – with tears in his eyes – that even though her outburst is accurate, she shouldn’t have shown him the mirror. Rumi, eventually, interprets his repeated indecisiveness as rejection and marries Robbie, the dependable NRI banker (Abhishek Bachchan). Here’s the catch though. In Kashyap and writer Kanika Dhillon’s deft hands, Bachchan’s Robbie undercuts the proverbial nice guy trope that continues to be peddled in Hindi cinema. Traditionally, the nice guy has always been depicted as the boring second choice (Ajay Devgn in Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam), the calm bystander (R Madhavan in Tanu Weds Manu), or the kind-hearted stranger (Salman Khan in Kuch Kuch Hota Hai). He’s limited to being the silent spectator in someone else’s love story – one who shows up the inadequacy of the existing lover, and wins over the girl due to his selflessness, stability, and unwavering love. If you think about it, we’ve never really known the nice guy beyond his perfections. That is, until Manmarziyaan’s Robbie.
Abhishek Bachchan’s Robbie is Manmarziyaan’s most interesting character.
Image credit: Colour Yellow Productions

