• Shubhra Gupta
    Shubhra Gupta
    Indian Express

    4

    The only reason not to run out of the theatre, screaming, is that Sharma displays a surprising flair for underplaying.

  • Sweta Kaushal
    Sweta Kaushal
    Hindustan Times

    4

    KKPK establishes Kapil Sharma’s acting skills beyond doubt, but he couldn’t have made a worse choice. Watch the film only if you are a hopeless fan of the comedian. For us, even his talent was not enough to save the regressive and non-original film.

  • Rohit Bhatnagar
    Rohit Bhatnagar
    Deccan Chronicle

    2

    Over all Kis Kisko Pyaar Karoon is a brain dead comic caper. The film looks like a cheap Bhojpuri melodrama. If you still curious to watch the comedy king of small screen Kapil, then you could try Kis Kisko Pyaar Karoon but don’t complain us later!

  • The few jokes that do work in this illogical, tardy drivel have more to do with how idiotic they are then amusing. But mostly you cringe at the sight of Kapil posing next to the full moon from a multi-storey’s terrace whilst his starry-eyed wives conduct the Karva Chauth ritual for the four-timing half’s long life.

  • Even if one walks into Kis Kisko Pyaar Karoon with zero expectation, the film would still be hard pressed to measure up.

    Verdict: If you have any pyaar to spare, shower it on better fare.

  • Renuka Vyavahare
    Renuka Vyavahare
    Times Of India

    4

    Arbaaz Khan and Varun Sharma deserve a special mention for they are hilarious. The girls look pretty and the samandar song is beautiful but if you want to see the film solely for Kapil’s brand of humour, you get babaji ka thullu.

  • This is misogyny and regression masquerading as comedy, and Sharma seems to be too busy trying to morph into a Hindi film hero to employ his famous comic timing to good effect. Unless you are a fan of Sharma and his somewhat questionable humour, this film seems like a joke gone wrong.

  • Sarita Tanwar
    Sarita Tanwar
    DNA India

    5

    If you’re a Kapil Sharma fan, chances are you’ll enjoy this one too. The brand and level of comedy is just the same as on his show.

  • In case you know how to handle dumb humor, this film will make you laugh and if not, God save you. This is not Kapil Sharma’s best attempt at comedy. In the name of a decent plot, you get ‘Babaji Ka Thullu’…

  • … can be watched if you enjoy Kapil Sharma’s style of comedy.

  • Sachin Chatte
    Sachin Chatte
    The Navhind Times

    3

    Create as much as chaos and confusion is the only mantra of screenplay, rest all be damned. The scenes are artificial and look forced, while there may be the odd funny line, there is very little reason to cheer in this oddball story.

  • Rachit Gupta
    Rachit Gupta
    Filmfare

    -

    Kis Kisko Pyaar Karoon is the quintessential family film. It’s comfortable entertainment with the right amount of popcorn quality. True to the masala formula, there are plenty of songs and exotic locations. There’s no action but a generous helping of humour. But all that genre specifics are part of a film that’s severely undercooked. Yes it will make you chuckle more than once, but two hours later you won’t remember a single thing.

  • …though the film hangs on a flimsy plot the duo manage to extract huge Laugh Out Loud moments from the goings-on on screen.

  • The film, however, does make you laugh out loud in parts — at some points, because it is genuinely funny, but mostly in sheer exasperation at the absurdity of it all.

  • Subhash K Jha
    Subhash K Jha
    SKJBollywoodNews

    6

    Off and on Abbas Mustan’s purported comedy will remind you of the Govinda comedies directed by David Dhawan and Anees Bazmi’s Sandwich. To his credit Kapil carries off the lighter moments with elan. But he is disastrous doing conventional romantic songs and other heroic stuff.

  • For the price of a movie ticket, you will be whooshed back to 1990s’ Bollywood. From tacky fashion to mansplaining, KKPK has everything that made the Nineties such a ghastly decade in Indian popular culture. The movie will make you say a prayer of thanks that we’ve left that era behind… until that awful moment when you realise this film was shot in 2014, has been released in 2015 and yet proudly declares that women need marriage like Kapil Sharma needs lip balm. That is, desperately.

  • Gayatri Gauri
    Gayatri Gauri
    Firstpost

    -

    The one good thing about KKPK is the pace at which Abbas-Mustan keep the film moving. Given more believable situations and lines, they might have done better. Meanwhile, if the sight of Kumar hanging on a wall and bringing in the moon, makes you laugh, go watch KKPK, but at your own risk.

  • Rahul Desai
    Rahul Desai
    Hyperbola

    -

    …this film is torturously dated, and runs far too long even as a glorified television episode. There have to be better ideas out there – like a spinoff movie on Sonam Kapoor’s computer-genius character from ‘Players’. You’re laughing already. See.

  • Komal Nahta
    Komal Nahta
    Komal Nahta's Blog

    -

    Kis Kisko Pyaar Karoon may not have much newness in the script but it will keep the audience smiling and laughing all through its running time. Masses and families will like the film which will, therefore, prove to be a very comfortable earning proposal for all concerned.

  • Troy Ribeiro
    Troy Ribeiro
    NowRunning

    3

    The humour comes in the form of witty dialogues and the situations, albeit oft seen and forced, with no logical links.

  • Stutee Ghosh
    Stutee Ghosh
    TheQuint

    -

    Kis Kisko Pyaar Karu is a lacklustre attempt at comedy, and Kapil’s performance offers nothing new. Why then did I not abandon the film half way in between? That’s because of the brilliant comic timing of Varun Sharma (of Fukrey fame) and Johnny Lever’s daughter Jamie who plays the confused maid.

  • … there are some good moments too but sadly they are few! The theme of the wedding sequence towards the end will actually make you laugh! Based on contrived circumstances, this script is deeply flawed.

  • Criselle Lobo
    Criselle Lobo
    BookMyShow

    -

    The film has some seriously funny moments and the dialogues will surely have you in splits. Also, watch it for Kapil Sharma and Varun Sharma’s excellent performances. If you’re in the mood to catch a leave-­your-­brains-­at-­home entertainer this weekend, then Kis Kisko Pyaar Karoon should be your first choice.

  • IndiaGlitz
    IndiaGlitz
    India Glitz

    6

    Well all said and done KKPK is a good fun provided you are ready to leave your brains outside the theatre while watching this amusingly light weight harmless dumb laughter where a man marries three women, does karva chauth with all of the three together and is planning to marriage his lady love for his cahutha (fourth marriage).

  • Subramanian Harikumar
    Subramanian Harikumar
    Bollywood Life

    5

    If you are looking for having a few laughs at the cinemas this week, and have the stomach to digest a dumb comedy, then Kis Kisko Pyaar Karoon is for you! Watch it for Kapil Sharma’s impressive debut!

  • Rashmi
    Rashmi
    TheWiire

    5

    …has an unimaginable script something hard to believe but just watch it, at your own risk.

  • One wonders if we’ll always be stuck with comedies, that in an attempt to be massy, end up as regressive and stuck in a time-warp.

  • JPN
    JPN
    Jagran

    4

    The film, however, does make you laugh out loud in parts — at some points, because it is genuinely funny, but mostly in sheer exasperation at the absurdity of it all.

  • Kis Kisko Pyaar Karoon will require you to literally leave logic, intelligence and common sense behind. Having said that Kapil Sharma’s comedy flick is thoroughly enjoyable and will make you laugh through out. Definitely worth the watch.

  • This hare-brained, idiotic buffoonery stoops too low for laughs and if you have any dignity and an inkling of respect for humour, give Kapil Sharma’s debut debacle a miss. As Mrs Funnybones writes, nothing is life is sacred, except laughter….Respect it!

  • …a throwback to the 1980s and ’90s, when comedies featuring clandestinely bigamous and harried husbands were common enough to qualify as a sub-genre. In television star Kapil Sharma’s big-screen debut, the stakes are doubled: his character Bholu has three wives, none of whom knows about each others and none of whom he particularly cares for, as well as a girlfriend he actually loves.

  • Go for it if you are able to send logic out of the window to enjoy a few laughs.