Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], November 25: Bhopal (not exactly, but stay with me) — As Tere Ishk Mein gears up for its theatrical release on 28 November 2025, the buzz around it is thrumming with a curious mix of reverence, controversy, and very tall emotions. Directed by Aanand L. Rai and starring Dhanush and Kriti Sanon, this is not just another love story — it’s meant to be a cathartic, bruising exploration of love, rage, and redemption. But as always, with great ambition comes great scrutiny.

From the moment the teaser dropped, the internet lit up — not just for how passionate the story seems, but also because many are comparing the film to Animal, the recent rage-movie darling. Rai hasn’t held back his response. Yes, there are “similarities” in the surface — anger, intensity, alpha-male energy — but he insists the emotional core is entirely different. He’s pitched Tere Ishk Mein as a “sophisticated, multi-layered love story,” not a toxic power fantasy.

“A story is never conceived thinking of your character as an alpha,” Rai said. He argues that his protagonist, Shankar (played by Dhanush), is not an embodiment of toxic dominance but a deeply sensitive soul.

The Roots of This Love Saga

Where did this all come from? According to Rai, unfinished emotions between him and Dhanush have been simmering since Atrangi Re. They revisited those raw, unresolved feelings — anger, longing, innocence lost — and wove them into Tere Ishk Mein. This isn’t just a movie; it’s a personal reckoning.

The film reunites key members of Rai’s creative family: writer Himanshu Sharma, composer A. R. Rahman, and lyricist Irshad Kamil — the same core that worked on Raanjhanaa.  The nostalgia factor is hard to ignore, but Rai paints this not as a rehash, but as something “frailer, bruised, still searching.”

Dhanush plays Shankar, an Indian Air Force officer, while Kriti Sanon is Mukti, a woman whose sorrow is as layered as her strength. Their chemistry, as glimpsed in the teaser, is less sugar-coated than epic — she drinks, he broods, they both burn.

Box Office Buzz & Real-World Stakes

The film isn’t just pulling heartstrings; it’s pulling wallets too. Advance bookings have crossed ₹1.77 crore for the first day, an unusually strong number for a romance that pitches itself more as soul-searching than spectacle. This suggests the audience is ready to show up — not just for flash, but for depth.

That said, rising audience expectations come with risk. If Tere Ishk Mein leans too much into melodrama, it could alienate viewers who backed it for honesty. And in today’s crowded release calendar, even a well-made love story needs more than poetry — it needs fire.

Critics, Comparisons & Creative Clarity

Some corners of the internet are already whispering (or shouting):

  • “Isn’t this just Animal wrapped in sarees?”

  • “Toxic love again. Why is Bollywood obsessed with rage-based romance?”

  • “Looks like a spiritual Raanjhanaa, but will it feel fresh or forced?”

Rai’s response: yes, there are echoes of Animal and Kabir Singh — but those are superficial. He argues that his story’s temperament is rooted in emotion, not dominance.

He’s not alone in defending this. On Reddit, some fans argue that his films “connect because the emotion feels natural, not forced.” Others, more skeptical, say the teaser gives “creepy toxic energy,” accusing the film of glorifying destructive love.

Production Backdrop & Creative DNA

Dhanush wrapped filming in July 2025, concluding the final leg of production. Principal photography began earlier in Varanasi, and the entire production is loaded with references to Rai’s past collaborations.

The teaser includes a powerful moment: Shankar returns from Banaras after his father’s cremation, carrying Ganga water to purify Mukti’s sins — literally and metaphorically.  In his own words, Rai says, “Ishk is only about surrender – letting it heal you, hurt you, and change you.”

The Soundtrack & Marketing Edge

Music, of course, is the soul. With A. R. Rahman on board and Arijit Singh lending his voice, the songs from this film are already earning praise for their evocative, timeless quality.

The promotional strategy has its bold moments: the concept trailer is being pushed in big-screen tie-ins, and the audio launch featured Dhanush singing a rare, unreleased Tamil song live — a moment fans still talk about.

Why This Film Matters — And Why It Might Be Risky

What could work:

  • It’s not just a romance — it’s grief, power, redemption.

  • Rai + Dhanush + Rahman = emotional pedigree.

  • It’s positioned as a spiritual successor to Raanjhanaa — but with more scars, less sunshine.

  • Early ticket sales and marketing are strongly in its favour.

What could backfire:

  • Comparisons with Animal could overshadow its unique voice.

  • If the “rage” angle veers too far into toxic melodrama, it may alienate critics and sensitive viewers.

  • A love story this emotionally heavy needs to balance depth with pace or risk becoming a slow burn without payoff.

Final Word

In a world drowning in superficial love stories, Tere Ishk Mein is betting on chaos — the kind that aches, the kind that changes you. If Rai nails the tone, this film could be a modern classic. But if he stumbles, the very rage he tries to elevate might become its undoing.

Either way, come 28 November, hearts will be on the line. And many are more than ready to place their bets.

PNN Entertainment