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Ae Dil Hai Mushkil Afsomali -

Karan Johar’s Ae Dil Hai Mushkil (2016) is not just a film—it is an emotion. Translating to “Oh Heart, It’s Difficult,” the title perfectly captures the essence of love that aches, lingers, and refuses to let go. At its core, the movie explores a theme rarely celebrated in mainstream Bollywood: unrequited love and the beauty found in heartbreak. The Story of Ayan and Alizeh The film follows Ayan (Ranbir Kapoor), a rich, aimless romantic, and Alizeh (Anushka Sharma), a fiery, independent woman who believes in moving on. They meet by chance, become inseparable friends, and share a bond that blurs every line. But when Ayan confesses his love, Alizeh gently—but firmly—rejects him. She loves someone else. And that is the film’s central conflict: what happens when your “one true love” only sees you as a friend? The Pain and Poetry of Moving On Unlike typical love stories where the hero eventually “wins” the girl, Ae Dil Hai Mushkil refuses to offer that comfort. Ayan’s journey is about learning to live with a love that isn’t returned. The film’s haunting soundtrack, especially the title track by Pritam and Arijit Singh, echoes this pain: “Tadap tadap ke is dil se hum, puchte rahe…” ( Restlessly, we kept asking this aching heart… ) Karan Johar masterfully layers the narrative with moments of joy (the banter in London, the Christmas dance) and devastating silence (the breakup scene on the street). It reminds us that heartbreak is not the end of love—it is another form of it. Why It Still Resonates In a world obsessed with “happily ever after,” Ae Dil Hai Mushkil stands out because it says: Some loves are not meant to be fulfilled. But that doesn’t make them any less real. It gives voice to everyone who has ever loved someone who didn’t love them back, teaching us that acceptance and self-worth are the real victories.

The film also pays homage to love in all its forms—friendship, obsession, sacrifice, and even loss (the moving tribute to Saba, played by Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, adds another layer of grieving a love that never fully blossomed). Ae Dil Hai Mushkil is not a film you watch—it is a film you feel . It stays with you like a half-healed scar, reminding you that having a heart that loves deeply, even painfully, is what makes life worth living. Because as the song says: “Ae dil hai mushkil, jeena yahan…” — It’s difficult to live here (with this heart), but we go on. And that is the bravest kind of love. ae dil hai mushkil afsomali

one comment
  1. The door was never really closed honestly. In the situation Nintendo DO want to simply update the existing Wii U/3DS version they don’t have to contract Sakurai, Namco or anybody else to do so. They can do it themselves. Of course keeping the characters in the game depends on licenses.

    This is ONLY in the case they want an updated port. They could do a new Smash Bros but either way a 6th instalment will hit Switch eventually.

    It just depends how Nintendo want to do it.

    ae dil hai mushkil afsomali
    haruhisailormars on July 30 |