8/10
Live it, hate it, but you can't ignore it
5 August 2020
Hum Aapke Hain Koun was a landmark film, undoubtedly. Love it, hate it, but you couldn't ignore it. Everyone watched it, from enthusiastic children to their doting parents, and even the parents' parents. Young lovebirds watched it together, for they imagined themselves in Madhuri Dikshit and Salman Khan pondering about what chaste love and sacrifice really could mean. I went to watch it too, and I had both the wife and the mother in tow, and this was probably the last time my mother stepped into the cinema theatre before her untimely demise, and that's one of the reasons that the film will hold a special place in my heart. Towards the end of the film, both the women between whom I was comfortably lodged, were in copious tears, leaving me thoroughly helpless and beleaguered.

Hum Aapke Hain Koun actually lacked originality. It was a shiny, polished, glitzy and expensive rehash of Rajshri's very own "Nadiya Ke Paar", helmed by Govind Moonis and starring Sachin and Sadhna Singh in a dual role. The storyline is absolutely similar, but the original was set in rural India which was Rajshri Production's usual playground. Nadiya Ke Paar was steeped in reality, sans the glamour, traditional overdose and musical melodrama of its later version and is unsurprisingly rated higher on IMDB. In stark contrast, Hum Aapke Hain Koun was all chocolatey, brimming with acts of kindness, upholding humanity, values and traditions to the point that one could choke, not with emotions, but out of sheer disbelief. Why doesn't God make any more men and women with such virtues?

But all the above information and critique is in hindsight, and certainly not straight from 1994. When Hum Aapke Hain Koun released, in spite of my having mapped it to Nadiya Ke Paar, I found it delightful and refreshing. Madhuri Dikshit was in her sublime form and Salman Khan played the perfect foil, energetic and charismatic. I thought he remained underrated in the film's super success story, and my heart went out to his role, just this once other than his performance in Bajrangi Bhaijaan. The music of Hum Aapke Hain Koun by Raam Laxman (Vijay Patil) was soulful, standout, immensely hummable and almost definitely the main reason for the film's runaway success, even though it came down as an overdose, almost resembling an incessant downpour. There was no lack of drama, melodrama, dialoguebaazi and the goofy goodness of everyone in the script - there wasn't an iota of badness anywhere. It's actually quite difficult to draw a parallel with Sooraj Barjatya's Hum Aapke Hain Koun, even today. Cheers to the twenty six years that Hum Aapke Hain Koun has traversed, it's often aired even now and remains immensely watchable, for different reasons to different people.
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