For Anushka Sharma, who had debuted in Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi as a sweet, quiet wife, Band Baaja Baaraat was her emancipation. She pulled off the negotiation scenes with the cold precision of a businesswoman and the emotional vulnerability of a young woman betrayed by her own heart. The film catalysed the "Delhi wave" in Bollywood. After this film, every other script wanted a hero who yelled "Sexy!" or a heroine who rode a scooty through the bylanes of Chandni Chowk. It celebrated the unpolished, loud, and vibrant subculture of Delhi’s middle class—the world of sarson ka saag , mattar kulche , and aggressive wedding one-upmanship.
Ranveer didn't just act; he inhabited the role. His improvisation on set (adding lines like "Gulab jamun hai, khaa lete hain" ) became legendary. The film proved that Bollywood had found its next superstar—not a chocolate boy, but a kinetic force of nature.
Enter Bittoo Sharma (Ranveer Singh), a lazy but charming graduate from a wealthy but dysfunctional family of sugarcane farmers. Bittoo has no job, no degree, and no real ambition except to enjoy life. When their paths cross at a wedding, Shruti sees Bittoo as a liability; Bittoo sees Shruti as a bore.
The film’s genius lies in the next 15 minutes. Shruti convinces Bittoo to become her business partner under one sacred rule: "Biwi ho ya girlfriend, partner nahi hoti" (A wife or girlfriend cannot be a business partner), she declares.
What follows is a classic rise-and-fall narrative. "Shruti & Bittoo Shaadi Mubarak" becomes the hottest wedding planning agency in West Delhi. They hustle, they fight, they share crispy kulche chole , and they build an empire from scratch. But the inevitable happens—they fall in love, break the contract, and the business implodes in a spectacular fashion.