When Bollywood legend Rishi Kapoor died in 2020, shooting for his last film, Sharmaji Namkeen (2022) was still incomplete. Rather than scrap the movie, the producers considered a number of frankly terrible ideas such as creating a CGI Rishi Kapoor or putting Kapoor's son Ranbir in prosthetics to play the part, but instead veteran character actor Paresh Rawal stepped in to complete the missing scenes. The end result is a movie with two leading men both playing the same role, and it works better than you might think.
Our hero is Brij Gopal Sharma (Kapoor and Rawal), who has just been forced to take early retirement from the kitchen appliance company where he worked. Sharma is not cut out for sitting at home and watching TV, so after driving the entire neighborhood crazy with home improvement projects, he spends some time bouncing from hobby to hobby and job interview to job interview. His only real passion is cooking, but when he suggests opening up a small stall, his older son Rinku (Suhail Nayyar) shuts down the idea immediately; it's not a respectable position for someone of their social class.
However, when his old friend Chadda (Satish Kaushik) asls him to cook for a relative's religious function, Sharma agrees. he cooks wonderfully, the people are all nice, everything is great . . . until Sharma catches a glimpse of the guests and realizes that he's not cooking for a religious function, he's cooking for a kitty party! (A kitty party is a mostly Indian tradition, one part social outing and one part savings club, in which a group of (usually) women pool money in a "kitty", and then they take turns every month using the money to host a party for the group.)
Sharma is horrified, leaves immediately, and makes polite excuses whenever the women call him and try to hire him again. But it was nice to have something to do, and even nicer to be treated with respect. And he's intrigued by one of the women in the group, the beautiful, sophisticated, and widowed Veena (Juhi Chawla.) So he goes back again. And again. Soon he's a fixture at the kitty parties, but he's still careful to keep his new career secret from his family and friends.
Sharma's not the only one keeping secrets. Younger son Vincy (Taaruk Raina) has been focused on his dream of dancing, and has failed his college exams. And Rinku is in a relationship with coworker Urmi (Isha Talwar). They're practically engaged, and Rinku has already made a large down payment on an apartment, but the corrupt developer seems intent on keeping the money without letting the young couple move in. Everybody's tired, and everybody's stressed. And then a family friend finds footage of Sharma dancing at a kitty party on Facebook.
This is a very Rishi Kapoor movie. The man was a versatile actor, and he's put in some strong performances in a variety of roles, but even before he aged out of playing romantic leads his public image has always been cuddly and avuncular. Sharmaji Namkeen has a charming, cozy ambiance that plays into that image. There's conflict, but it's mostly conflict between people who love each other, and we know they'll make it work in the end. The closest the movie gets to social controversy is its portrayal of kitty parties as a space where women can express themselves without worrying about their assigned societal roles.
It takes a little while to get used to the dual lead actors alternating scenes, but it's not as distracting as you might think. It helps that Paresh Rawal doesn't look very much like Rishi Kapoor and isn't trying to do any sort of Rishi Kapoor impression, he's just playing to the emotional truth of the character in his own fashion, a bit less cuddly and a bit more exasperated. It lets Kapoor and Rawal fade into the background and lets Sharma take center stage.
This is not a groundbreaking movie, but it's a fun and comfortable movie, and casting Juhi Chawla as the female romantic lead in a new movie will always get bonus points from me.
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