Maybe the problem isn’t Junaid Khan-Sai Pallavi-starrer Ek Din, its us
We have become conditioned to expect constant stimulation—twists, drama, scale. And somewhere in that shift, we may have quietly lost the patience to sit with something gentle, something that doesn’t try to overwhelm us but simply asks us to feel. Perhaps that’s why Ek Din feels unfamiliar. It doesn’t chase grandeur; it chooses to stay with ordinary people and their very real, very quiet emotions.And maybe that discomfort also comes from what the film says about us.It’s one of those stories that, as a society, we are quick to judge — which one of us hasn’t had a crush and gone out of our way for a glimpse, a moment, a conversation? By that measure, haven’t we all, at some point, occupied that awkward, vulnerable space we are so quick to ridicule in others? This is where Junaid Khan’s character quietly stands out. He is invisible in his own world—reduced to being “the IT guy,” someone remembered only when something stops working. He carries a silent crush on Sai Pallavi’s character, one that never quite finds expression. After a year and a half of working alongside the woman he likes, even a simple handshake becomes a moment of possibility—perhaps enough to finally ask her out for coffee. But that fragile hope collapses when he learns she is seeing their boss. In many ways, this dynamic isn’t new to cinema either. We have seen versions of it before—men so under-confident in their own identity that they feel the need to become someone else to be seen. Think of Surinder Sahni from Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi, who transforms into “Raj” because he believes his real self isn’t enough to win over Taani. Or Abhay Sharma—“Froggy”—from Pyaar Impossible!, who quietly represents all the introverted, overlooked men who exist on the margins, unseen despite their sincerity. What Ek Din does differently, however, is that it doesn’t offer transformation as a solution. There is no alter ego, no dramatic reinvention. Instead, it stays with that discomfort—the hesitation, the self-doubt, the fear of not being enough. And perhaps that’s what makes it feel more real, and at times, more unsettling. That boss, played by Kunal Kapoor, exists in a morally grey space that feels uncomfortably real. He presents himself as a man trapped in an unhappy marriage, on the verge of a divorce—vulnerable, misunderstood. He invites her into his world through conversations, confessions, and carefully chosen words like “Tum nahi hoti toh…,” building intimacy without ever taking responsibility. It’s subtle, persuasive, and deeply manipulative.Story continues below this ad And then there is Sai Pallavi—effortless, relatable, and heartbreakingly real. Her character is not weak; she is simply human. A young woman, away from family, emotionally open, wanting to believe in something sincere. Not every 24–25-year-old has the experience to recognise such emotional traps. And to be fair, not every man navigating a difficult marriage is dishonest. But that’s precisely the point—Ek Din isn’t dealing in extremes. It lives in the grey areas, where most of our real lives exist. At its core, this is a story of two people: a woman who falls for the wrong man, and a man so conditioned by his own invisibility and self-doubt that he convinces himself the woman he likes is out of his league—never once finding the courage to ask her out. Not because he feels nothing, but because he fears rejection, humiliation, or being labelled something he is not. And if we look closely, we all know people like them. Or perhaps, at some point, we have been them. ALSO READ | Archana Puran Singh claps as son Aayushmann’s girlfriend moves in with them, jokes coffee machine is ‘dowry’Story continues below this ad That’s what makes the film quietly powerful. Not because it tells a new story, but because it tells a familia




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