Kash Aap Hamare Hote

Kash… Aap Hamare Hote
Directed by Ravindra Peepat
Produced by Nadira Babbar
Written by Atul Tiwari
Ravindra Peepat
Starring Juhi Babbar
Sonu Nigam
Music by Aadesh Shrivastava
Cinematography Manmohan Singh
Editing by Akiv Ali
Release date(s) 14 February 2003
Country India
Language Hindi

Kash… Aap Hamare Hote (Translation: Wish... You Were Mine) is a 2003 Bollywood musical film. The film starred Juhi Babbar in her film debut[1] and was directed by Ravindra Peepat. The original music is by Aadesh Shrivastava.[2]

Contents

Plot

Amrita (Juhi Babbar) is the adopted daughter of Yashwant Raj Mankotia (Om Puri). Amrita was actually the daughter of late Yashwant Raj's friend. Yashwant has a son, Randeep Raj Mankotia (Sharad S. Kapoor) who is in Canada. Yashwant plans to get Randeep and Amrita married. Randeep does not want to go to India to visit his father. To make Randeep come Yashwant pretends to have heart trouble. Randeep does not want to leave his business. He gets even more upset when he learns that he is going to marry Amrita. His father says if he does not accept the marriage all his property will go to Amrita. Randeep agrees to the marriage. After the wedding, Randeep and Amrita travel to Canada. When they go to Randeep's house, Amrita meets Simone (Saadhika), Randeep's business partner/spouse. Simone and Randeep humiliate Amrita and she runs away. Randeep gathers some men and orders them to find Amrita and kill her. Amrita then hides in the garage of Jay Kumar (Sonu Nigam) who befriends her. Daljit (Dolly) Brar (Ravee Gupta) is the daughter of Jay's boss, and is jealous of the friendship between them so she fires Jay. Yashwant Raj misses Amrita so he goes to Canada to visit her. When Yashwant asks where Amrita is Randeep lies and says she has humiliated him by taking up alcohol. Yashwant doesn't realise that to get his daughter he has to kill a human being.

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Cast

Critical reception

Kash... Aap Hamare Hote did not do well in the box office. Critics say, "The film starts off good but as the drama goes on, the story starts loosening its grip. Juhi Babbar's debut should have been a thriller." Taran Adarsh rated it only one and a half stars out of five and said it is "a run-of-the-mill flick".

References