The film opens on a postcard of chaos: a double-decker baraat, blaring bhangra and qawwali through a stack of speakers, threads of marigold tangled in rearview mirrors. At its center is the wedding that is and isn’t: a benami shadi — a marriage of names, made to keep appearances while the real hearts and plans hide in the margins. The camera loves this world, lingering on the small rebellions — a bride’s ink-streaked thumb, a groom’s borrowed suit, a neighbor pressing chai into a tremulous hand — details that plant the story in warm, lived-in skin.

At the film’s heart is a trio of secret economies — love, power, and identity — braided into the marriage’s ledger. The bride, brilliant and pragmatic, negotiates her future with the same skill she uses to stitch embroidered gowns; the groom is both a map of contradictions and a plea for dignity; and the matchmaker, a sly architect of respectable illusions, keeps the plot’s cogs turning with rueful efficiency. Each character is shaded with contradictions that feel human rather than symbolic: choices that sting, compromises that bloom into unexpected tenderness.

Rangeen Kahaniyan’s tone is kaleidoscopic: comic and cutting in the same breath. It sends up social theatre with a wink — the absurdity of customs performed for audiences of judgmental relatives — while letting intimate moments breathe. Its humor derives from recognition rather than ridicule: characters whose exaggerations are compassionate portraits of survival tactics in tightly circled communities.