
All Recent Reviews of
Nadaaniyan
Reviewers on this page:
Renuka Vyavahare
Ishita Sengupta
Sukanya Verma
Shomini Sen
Rahul Desai
Priyanka Roy
Anupama Chopra
About Nadaaniyan

Title: | Nadaaniyan |
---|---|
Original Title: | नादानियां |
Plot: | A privileged Delhi socialite hires a middle-class student to pose as her boyfriend to maintain her social status. Their pretense becomes complicated when genuine feelings develop between them. |
Cast: | Ibrahim Ali Khan, Khushi Kapoor, Suniel Shetty, Mahima Chaudhry, Jugal Hansraj, Dia Mirza |
Director: | Shauna Gautam |
Nadaaniyan
Renuka Vyavahare
The Times of India

A rambling love story that’s too filtered to be true
Despite the potential, the storytelling and emotions in Nadaaniyan are as shallow and filtered as beautified Instagram posts.
To win over her best friends and wriggle out of a sticky situation, poor little rich girl Pia Jaisingh (Khushi Kapoor) convinces her new classmate, a career-driven Arjun Mehta (Ibrahim Ali Khan) to be her rental boyfriend. The Instagram love story looks perfect on reels until things get real between the two. You can predict this story as soon as it begins. It follows the tropes of any teen romance. Pia offers Rs 25K a week to Arjun, an aspiring lawyer to get him to pretend as her boyfriend. She’s a wealthy Delhi girl; he’s from Greater Noida. He thinks love is a distraction, she thinks her world revolves around love. Her family’s patriarchal, his parents are liberal. Despite the differences, the two make a deal. She soft launches him on her socials before the big reveal. What happens when the two catch feelings?
Nadaaniyan
Ishita Sengupta
Independent Film Critic

Where Are We Headed?
Shauna Gautam’s debut feature Nadaaniyan's leads are so dull that even in a ranking of Hindi cinema’s most forgettable protagonists, Pia (Khushi Kapoor) and Arjun (Ibrahim Ali Khan) wouldn’t qualify.
History is proof that the most memorable Hindi films have centred on impossible deals. I will offer some examples. In Raj Kanwar’s Judaai (1997), a wife sold her husband to another woman for a briefcase of cash. In Satish Kaushik’s Hum Aapke Dil Mein Rehte Hain (1999), the two principal characters enter into a one-year marriage contract; in S. Shankar’s Nayak: The Real Hero (2001), a journalist makes a deal with a chief minister to fill in his shoes for a day. Apart from finding Anil Kapoor, the actor present in all three films, either brokering deals or being brokered in such agreements, the instances highlight the commonality of these segues.
Nadaaniyan
Sukanya Verma
rediff.com

Naah-daniyan!
Nadaaniyan's lack of charm, chemistry and cheek fails to create any ripples
Colleges are swanky theme parks for fashion and filmi romances in Karan Johar’s universe. From Kuch Kuch Hota Hai to Student of the Year, the coolness quotient in his depiction is a no-expense-spared fantasy we continue to live in vicariously. No wonder his more hand-me-down home productions and streaming offshoots have no desire to escape its allure. Only the pretty leans heavily towards plastic in Nadaniyaan, the Netflix campus romance directed by his Rocky Aur Rani Ki Prem Kahaani assistant Shauna Gautam based on Riva Razdan Kapoor’s story. Desperate high schooler striking a mutually beneficial deal with a fellow student to play her pretend boyfriend for a few days until they actually fall in love causing complications is a done-to-death Hollywood trope.
Nadaaniyan
Shomini Sen
Wion

Ibrahim Ali Khan and Khushi Kapoor's film is completely unnecessary
The trailer of Nadaaniyan- which marks the debut of Saif Ali Khan and Amrita Singh’s son Ibrahim Ali Khan in Bollywood opposite Sridevi’s daughter Khushi Kapoor - had given us all enough hints at how bland a film it would be. When I sat down to watch the movie, my expectations were already low considering that the trailer looked unimpressive. But the film, helmed by Shauna Gautam and backed by Karan Johar’s Dharmatic, is far lower than what I had expected it to be. A two-hour bland romance drama, Nadaaniyan makes Gen Z -the film’s target audience- look dumb, dumber, dumbest, and its lead characters one dimensional with zero sense of rationale and practicality.
Nadaaniyan
Rahul Desai
The Hollywood Reporter India

Ibrahim Ali Khan, Khushi Kapoor Both At-Sea in This Vacant Vanity Vehicle
‘Nadaaniyan’ blunts the Dharma Productions’ shtick of meta gags, woke updates and confessional storytelling
It’s a wonder that after 12 years of professional film criticism and finding creative ways to pan ghastly Bollywood movies, the deepest thought that entered my head after watching Nadaaniyan was: “I want to kick this film”. Such a primal, crude urge. Kick, really? So much for all those analytical skills and fancy words. All those carefully constructed rants and sarcastic takedowns. It’s the kind of thought that’s second to an animalistic grunt. I should do better. I should be calmer. But hey, at least I’m calling myself out here. At least I’m admitting that my brain is broken and incapable of making sense. That makes me ‘Self-Aware’. And self-awareness is a superpower that we often abuse to weaponise our flaws. In this day and age, an idiot that knows they’re an idiot is automatically wise.
Nadaaniyan
Priyanka Roy
The Telegraph

Ibrahim Ali Khan’s debut, is borderline unwatchable
I had never thought that there would come a film — at least in my lifetime — that could challenge the combined vacuous pointlessness of the Student of the Year franchise. That distinction belongs to Nadaaniyan, a film which, even though we are just in March, stands a good chance of being within the Top 5 section of the worst films list of 2025. Nadaaniyan, streaming on Netflix, comes from the same folks who, of course, made the Student of the Year franchise. Dharma Productions may have packaged its ‘younger’ productions as the more sleek-sounding Dharmatic, but Nadaaniyan is clearly not the kind of film that is going to take them far. Nor is it the kind of debut that actors Saif Ali Khan and Amrita Singh should have approved for their son Ibrahim Ali Khan.