

Reviewed by bLuR-7 10 / 10 Lives up to its hype. It's a pity the film doesn't live up to this level, and just ends up being really overlong, and for no justifiable reason. Other than Khan and Bachchan, the film has a beautiful Aishwarya Rai in a short appearance, and it is very memorable today for its magic track "Humko Hamise Churalo", sung to perfection by the divine Lata Mangeshkar, who was, hold on to your seats, over 70 years old when singing it. Instead of focusing on the ideological differences between Khan and Bachchan, Aditya Chopra makes them the background through a great portion of the film, turning what could have been a good drama into something that resembles a very cliched and boring high-school romance. But besides that, you have a story which is not very convincing and worse, most of it centers on the young stars and starlets and their college romances, with Khan given the task of matching them all up together. Khan is very, very good in this energetic but relatively subtle performance, and Bachchan is imperious and towering in his pride. Okay, this film stars Bachchan and Khan in a film showing a sort of clash between the two over practically nothing. Reviewed by Peter_Young 5 / 10 Interesting interactions between Bachchan and Khan in an otherwise long and tiring film It is also the story of 3 young men and women who have to learn to follow their hearts against all the odds and the outcome of their love stories that will decide what will finally triumph. Narayan Shankar (Amitabh Bachchan) - voted the Millennium star in the BBC polls) a strict disciplinarian as the head of India's most prestigious educational institute who stands for fear, he believes that love leads to pain and weakness.

Raj Aryan (Shahrukh Khan), who stands for love, he would go to any lengths for it. National Award winner, Yash Chopra and Aditya Chopra's MOHABBATEIN is a film that portrays the battle between love and fear - A battle between two stubborn men and their opposing beliefs.
