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The plot follows Raj (Ranbir Kapoor, in a magnetic debut), a free-spirited, eccentric musician who arrives in a mysterious town and soon falls hopelessly for Sakina (Sonam Kapoor, also making her first appearance). But Sakina’s heart already belongs to another—the brooding, absent Imaan (Salman Khan). As Raj tries to win her over through charm, poetry, and persistence, Saawariya becomes less about who ends up together and more about the ache of loving without return.

Though the film received mixed reviews upon release—some found its pacing too languid, its world too artificial— Saawariya has since gained cult appreciation for its sheer audacity. In an era of loud, formulaic Bollywood blockbusters, Bhansali dared to make a quiet, lyrical fable about waiting, hoping, and letting go. Ranbir Kapoor’s electric energy and Sonam Kapoor’s ethereal innocence anchor the film, while Rani Mukerji’s cameo as a mystical courtesan (Gulabji) adds wry warmth.

When Sanjay Leela Bhansali set out to make Saawariya (2007), he wasn’t just telling a love story—he was painting a mood, a midnight-blue reverie suspended between reality and fantasy. Based on Fyodor Dostoevsky’s short story “White Nights,” the film transports the classic tale of unrequited love into an imagined, timeless city where it rains perpetually and every cobblestone glistens with melancholy.

Watch it for the music, the visuals, and the birth of Ranbir Kapoor’s star presence—but mostly, watch it if you believe love is worth singing about, even when it breaks your heart.