Kis Kisko Pyaar Karoon 2 is a showdown of the comic (embarrassing) chaos that new-age polyamory (polygamous relationships) can eventually lead to. In today’s dating world, the term has become fancy, but in real time, it is somewhere a confusion manufacturer, with lives in performance go tossed in the midst of emotions and sentiments. A human being apparently can’t be a dharamshala, or as the film notes, to reflect the society with satire, ‘constitution,’ that it shall start to accept everyone in its presence. The film shows it up with humour where you can get your belly cracked—but it has everything that anyone can become rebellious to in real life.

Helmed by debutant director Anukalp Goswami, the film impresses with its sharp social satire, offering insightful commentary on gender, religion, relationships, and the intricate nature of human emotions. The film stars Kapil Sharma in the lead, alongside a rich ensemble cast of Ayesha Khan, Tridha Choudhury, Warina Hussain, and Parul Gulati.
Kapil Sharma finds himself in an array of emotions. In the chase of the woman of his choice, whom he loves and wants to marry, gets himself into situations that lead him to marry a different man. Eventually, he marries three women from three different religions, and Kapil finds himself caught up in mixed emotions, madness, and chaos. He tries to keep the calm and peace, but nothing really comes to fruition.

The film tries to give a message through its slapstick script, but that is where we feel it loses its aim—that is, to give the audience its due laughter. Inclusivity is serious business, and in a chaotic script like this, it becomes a mismatch, eventually losing its raw Kapil Sharma-like humour. However, Kapil Sharma yet shoulders the story with his classic punch lines that we have witnessed over the years.
Yet, this makes a good watch. The film feels like a breather amidst the heavy, intensified scripts like Dhurandhar and Tere Ishk Mein in the past weeks.
IWMBuzz rates 3.5/5 stars.
