rried after meeting just once display all the awkwardness a couple go through when in an arranged marriage. And in the process, the director brings into focus marriage and its various interpretations through the lives of the other couples.
Theres also Raj Zutshi and Tarina Patel who live-in; Perizaad Zorabian and Bikram Saluja who are on their third holiday; and Sadia Siddiqui and Mukul Dev, two childhood sweethearts who have taken each other for granted. Its only when she changes into a saree that Mukul sees his wife in a different light, away from the image he has of her in a frock. Both, Mukul and Sadia stand out for their act.
Coming back to the protagonists, Fardeen as the man who is supposed to bottle his emotions and allow his wife to get the feel of him being around her emotes well. As for Esha, she is growing with every performance. With perfect expressions and body language to boot, she portrays well what millions of girls go through in an arranged marriage.
The dialogues are good so is the background music. Like I mentioned earlier, if not for HONEYMOON this flick would have hit the mark. But with two films already in two months showing the lives of six couples (SALAAM-E-ISHQ included) one wonders whether the audience will be game for more multiple love stories.
JUST MARRIED, just about makes it!