We see a sad Raghu boarding a bus and pleasantly surprised to see a smiling Pooja, sitting inside the bus in her bridal attire. So this time with the support of her father, who also understands that Raghu is the right guy for her daughter and interspersed with the gem of dialogues which oscillates between ‘Pooja beti bhag ja.’ and ‘Meri beti bhag gayi.’, Pooja runs away from her wedding, leaving a dumbfounded Deepak Kumar. More misunderstandings follow and after a heartbreaking rendition of a Kumar Sanu crooned ‘Tu Pyar Hai Kisi Aur Ka’, eventually, Pooja realizes that the man of her dreams is actually Raghu, incidentally whose last name she despises so much. Pooja storms out of Raghu’s life, as he was prepping himself to marry her. Running from goons and detectives sent by Pooja’s father, both Raghu and Pooja go through a chain of events, resulting in a serious misunderstanding which separates the two. “Kisi ne sach hi kaha hai… Upar wala jab deta hai, toh chappr phad ke deta hai !!!”Īdventures, mishaps, love, and heartbreak they all follow Raghu and Pooja, in the midst of the landscapes of Ooty and mesmerizing voices of Kumar Sanu and Anuradha Paudwal. As the bus starts rolling, Pooja falls on Raghu’s lap and amidst the cacophony of laughter, Raghu snidely remarks She meets Raghu Jaitly, a news reporter on the bus to Bangalore in a rather funny circumstance.
#Dil hai ke manta nahin aamir khan movie
Inspired from Raj Kapoor’s ‘Chori Chori’ (1956), which itself was inspired from Frank Capra’s ‘It happened one night’ (1934), it’s the story of Pooja who runs off from her home to meet the man of his dreams, an upcoming movie star Deepak Kumar, who by the way, is an incompetent nincompoop. It’s been many years, but the freshness of the film remains as is, which’s surprising because the film is a remake of a remake! A film where a woman runs from her home to marry the man of her dreams and a reporter who secretly follows her for the scoop of his life was both adorable as well as enjoyable. No points for guessing the song! ‘Dil Hai Ke Manta Nahin’ was pure bliss, for the ears and the eyes. A cold shoulder wearing Pooja Bhatt, a mischievous Aamir Khan and both fighting for watermelon on a cold night. Out of those 2/3 songs, one was mandatory. By DD’s standards those days, latest meant anything that was released in the nineties. While the songs were mostly nostalgic with Rafi, Asha, Lata, Kishore making the day heavenly, there was a segment, towards the end, that played two or three latest songs.
Growing up, we had a stable diet of Rangoli on Doordarshan, every Sunday morning.