Rohan goes in search of his brother who has, in the meanwhile, moved to London.īy now, Anjali’s younger sister Pooja aka Poo has also grown up to be a high-on-attitude, western beauty. He learns the truth ten years later and promises to reunite the family. Rohan, who happens to be in boarding school, is oblivious to this. Rahul cannot bear his father reminding him that he does not have 'Raichand' blood in him. He falls for the lower-middle class, chirpy and noisy Anjali, marries her and brings her home, against the wishes of his father.įather cannot bear this and breaks his own rule of not discussing his son's adopted status. Rahul does not know of his father's desire or that Naina loves him madly. The father has selected Naina as elder daughter-in-law. Mail your review of Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham in less than 200 wordsĪ cannot-be-happier-and-richer family has everything going for it. Lastly there is Naina (Rani Mukherji), daughter of Yashovardhan’s friend. The Raichand family: Strict businessman Yashovardhan (Amitabh Bachchan), his compliant, loving wife Nandini (Jaya Bachchan), adopted son Rahul (Shah Rukh Khan), younger son Rohan (Hrithik Roshan) and two grandmothers (Sushma Seth and Achla Sachdev).Ī middle-class maid for the sons (Farida Jalal), her neighbour (Alok Nath), his daughters Anjali (Kajol) and Pooja (grows up to be Kareena post-interval). In whatever!īut before we get into all that, first things first. In the lack of freshness in the script, screenplay, dialogues and pairing. Rich in the amount spent (approximately Rs 400 million). Rich in sheen, polish and emotions (read tears). Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham is rich,' said writer-director Karan Johar about K3G, his second film. , Movies:The Rediff Review: Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham