Much of the film’s runtime is dedicated to the humorous schemes and misunderstandings that arise as the trio competes for her affection.
Arshad Warsi, Aashish Chaudhary, Yash Tonk, Udita Goswami, Aarti Chhabria. kisse pyaar karoon 2009
The film’s most revealing element is its treatment of women. Despite the title’s question—“Whom Should I Love?”—the women are not given an equal voice. They are prizes, variables in Siddharth’s equation. Their anger is real, but it is ultimately neutralized for the sake of a “happy” ending. In a startling resolution, the wives do not reject Siddharth; instead, they agree to share him, their individual autonomy sacrificed for a superficial domestic harmony. This is not a celebration of polyamory; it is the ultimate fantasy of patriarchal control—a harem disguised as a family. The women become the currency of a masculine economy, their love a commodity to be managed, bartered, and finally, monopolized. The film thus reveals its deep-seated fear: what if women, with their newfound agency in the 2000s (careers, independence, choice), were to demand a singular, authentic love? Siddharth’s bigamy is a defense mechanism against that very possibility. "Kisse Pyaar Karoon" (2009): Revisiting the Cult Classic
: It is often confused with the 2015 hit comedy Kis Kisko Pyaar Karoon starring Kapil Sharma, which was a significant box office success, unlike the 2009 film. Despite the title’s question—“Whom Should I Love
– Performed by Shaan and Daboo Malik.
The conflict arises when Sidhant discovers that Anjali’s father, (Asrani), is an extremely strict and eccentric man who has already fixed Anjali’s marriage with someone else. To make matters worse, Sidhant had previously humiliated the Colonel in a comical misunderstanding.