Hum Bhaagke Shaadi Karne Walon Ke Liye Aisa Service Provide Karenge Jo Saari Bhasodi Set Karde. - RunningShaadi.com Movie Dialogues
Hum Bhaagke Shaadi Karne Walon Ke Liye Aisa Service Provide Karenge Jo Saari Bhasodi Set Karde. - RunningShaadi.com Movie Dialogues
RunningShaadi.com Movie Story, Dialogues, Review
The unlikely duo of a conscientious Bihari and a Sardarji geek stand up and create a platform providing “High Take Social Service“ to Indian couples who want to spend their lives with their soul mates. The film was released on 17 February 2017.
The Shoojit Sircar production stars Amit Sadh , Taapsee Pannu and Arsh Bajwa .it will be released to an audience of over 1,100 screens with music from an assembled list of performers
A 23-year-old Ram Bharose and his teenaged whiz-kid Sardar befriend Sarabjeet Sidhaana A.K.A. ‘Cyberjeet’ and strike upon an ingenious brainwave of starting a website that helps young couples in Amritsar elope and get married.
The website is called ‘runningshaadi.com’ and it offers a comprehensive array of services to facilitate runaway weddings. The website becomes an instant hit with young, love-struck couples facing pressure from their parents and the site becomes a rage in small town Amritsar.
While they are successful in getting many couples together, the underlying story of Runningshaadi.com lends itself to an unexpected twist. What happens with the site, along with the absurdities of making couples elope, is the catch of the film that lends an humorous joy ride.
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Running Shaadi clearly has some very strange ideas about love and modernity. And stranger still when it comes to modern-day Patna, though at least that lends itself to the film’s few moments of genuine humour.
As yet another film centred around the great Indian wedding, Nimmi (Taapsee Pannu, in an accent that will make any self-respecting Punjabi cringe) is the daughter of a bridal-wear store owner in Amritsar. Bharose (Amit Sadh, genuine if nothing else) is a Bihari employee at the shop. At first, Amit Roy, a cinematographer making a directing debut, appears to have a kernel of an idea about budding love between a Sikh girl and a Bihari boy in a set-up that perhaps encourages little, if any interaction between two such people.