The solution Sanjay and Karina find for their snafus - posing as a couple so as to access a nearby housing scheme - carries Tiwari's film into the realms of convention and convenience, yet these aren't the breezy hucksters who waft through Western romcoms, eminently capable of sustaining such deceptions. They're visibly nervy kids, doubtless more dependent for having spent so long at home, who at every twist of this plot appear out of their depth and unsettled in a dozen ways besides. (What the film locks down most precisely is the connection between domestic and romantic insecurity.) Any pleasure depends on us wanting to cohabit with the leads, and Tiwari hands himself the advantage of relatively fresh faces - performers who don't necessarily own four-storey townhouses with attached waiting staff, who retain some sense-memory of what it is to live cheque to cheque. Kaushal isn't an obvious catch, and at one point Sanjay is rude to a waiter, which raises a red flag, but his unforced and natural responses are appealing: he plays even regulation scenes in ways no established star, with their tried-and-tested array of tics, would. (Watch him underplay his big speech, while still appearing to speak directly from the heart.) Dhar, for her part, ensures Karina isn't some common-or-garden romcom kook, but - more poignantly - a sensible young woman who's done the right things all her life and still found herself no closer to Mr. Right or the home of her dreams. Tiwari keeps things snappy without ever forcing anything in the plot, rooting each interaction in character: he makes smart use of such seasoned comic players as Raghubir Yadav and Ratna Pathak Shah among his variably fussing parents, and pulls off something quietly inspired late on in having domestic upheaval spill over into first the workplace, then a shared courtyard. Everything is unhoused, and the boundaries separating private and public get comprehensively trampled over. Still, at every stage, it feels as though someone behind the camera lived through something like this, and Tiwari takes an extra care to ensure this plot's sudden flurries of intimacy - a night on the sofa, a kiss on a metro train - count double. Rare to see a romcom take so little for granted.
Love Per Square Foot is streaming on Netflix.
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