T
he year is 2009. Imtiaz Ali is fresh off the success of
Jab We Met and possibly telling himself “main apni favourite hoon”. Saif Ali Khan is Bollywood’s premiere metrosexual hero and Deepika Padukone is a relatively fresh face doing only her third film. Their coming together makes a movie called Love Aaj Kal, whose chart-topping soundtrack has Pritam’s trademark earworm genius all over it. I’m all of 17 – it’s a couple of months after our Std 12th board exams and a Cheese popcorn and Pepsi combo costs only ₹100 at a PVR. It was a magical time to be young. My college friends and I are experiencing our first brush with love and heartbreak and it’s at this exact period in time that we decide to walk into PVR Juhu to catch this very film. In Love Aaj Kal, Ali flitted around with two love stories set in different timelines: One is set in present day and revolves around flaky millennial couple Jai (Saif Ali Khan) and Meera (Deepika Padukone) who are on the verge of a break-up. And the other is set in the past, that tells the love story – replete with montages of silent pining – of Veer (Rishi Kapoor, but because this is a Bollywood film, his younger version is also played by Saif Ali Khan) and Harleen (Giselle Monteiro). When my friends and I watched the film, our understanding of love and relationship was limited, at best, shaped up by the romantic myths that Bollywood routinely sold us. It was a time when we genuinely believed that true love trumped over every obstacle and that it excused any and every inappropriate behaviour. So naturally, we laughed along when old-school Saif and his Sardar version of the Stranger Things bike gang followed Harleen around the lanes of old Dilli. And we kept guffawing, when current-day Saif’s friends encouraged him to be a “Khulla Saand”, denoting that it’s the duty of every young man to be aggressively sowing his wild oats.Riding high on Jai and Meera’s love story, many of us ditched newer romantic prospects and actively jumped back into trysts with our exes. Illuminati Films
For us adolescents back then, watching Jai and Meera reunite despite having broken up, getting married to someone else, and moving away from each other, felt liberating. It fuelled our dumb belief that even after a break-up, our exes could still be the ones we are meant to end up with. Riding high on Jai and Meera’s love story, many of us ditched newer romantic prospects and actively jumped back into trysts with our exes. What followed was a series of unnecessary backslides, sloppy “Let’s stay friends with benefits” pacts and an overall incestious group dynamic that is still the reason why most of us can’t see eye to eye at our college reunions. And I even know some people who use Jai and Meera’s happily-ever-after as justification for stalking their exes on social media. Imagine being told all your life that there is someone out there for you. But then, a movie comes in and reminds you that in all probability, that person could just be your ex. Thanks but no thanks Imitiaz Ali. It’s been a decade since Love Aaj Kal released and Imtiaz Ali much-awaited sequel, featuring Sara Ali Khan and Kartik Aryan releases tomorrow. Today, I’m 27 and understand that we musn’t always yearn to win back our Jais and Meeras. Sometimes, knowing that your time with someone is coming to an end is reason enough to let them go. That, after all, defines Love Aaj Kal.The idea of a mutual separation seemed alien because if it’s love, how can you be okay with letting go?

