Sunil learns that Anna is going to marry Chris. He has a choice: fight, cause a scene, or ruin the wedding. What does he do? He tells the priest that he is happy. But as he walks down the aisle, he stumbles. In a moment of pure, unscripted genius (visualized beautifully by Khan), Sunil pretends his shoelace is untied just so he can kneel and pray for Anna’s happiness.
Anna, however, is intelligent, practical, and harbors feelings for the band’s lead singer, Chris (Deepak Tijori)—a handsome, stable, and genuinely nice guy.
It teaches us that life is not about winning or losing. It is about the moments in between—the kabhi haan (sometimes yes) and the kabhi naa (sometimes no). And that even if the answer is "no," the journey of loving is never wasted.
Directed by Kundan Shah, famous for the satirical gem Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro , this film was a radical departure from the norm. It did not feature Shah Rukh Khan as the rich, brooding, angry young man. Instead, it presented Shah Rukh Khan—at the peak of his early career—as a goofy, unemployed, small-town guitarist who cannot get the girl.