Vicky, played by Rajkummar Rao is known as a mehendi artist, marries Vidya, played by Triptii Dimri who is his neighbour and completed her MBBS. After their marriage, they choose to forgo the family’s present of a Vaishno Devi trip and opt for a honeymoon in Goa instead. Vicky and Vidya decide to film their first night for the sake of pleasurable memories. However, on an unfortunate night, a robbery takes place in their house and the CD, in which the couple’s video was recorded, also gets stolen. The rest of the story is about how Vicky and Vidya find out where the CD is and who stole it from them.
Rajkummar Rao was natural as usual and Tripti Dimri was also good. Vijay Raaz was fantastic and entertained very well. Mallika Sherawat was useful while Rakesh Bedi, Archana Puran Singh, Tiku Talsania, Mukesh Tiwari and others were apt.
Director Raaj Shaandilya has already hinted about the film’s narrative with the trailer. VVKWWV tells the story of a newlywed couple who gets entangled in an unexpected and weird situation. The director put all the elements that are required for a comedy drama but, he stretched the film and made it look repetitive and boring.
The first half of the film works effectively with the comedy scenes coming out superbly. The songs in the first half are too good and blend into the narrative. All the actors did their job properly and contributed to every alternative scene. Especially, all the parts involving Vijay Raaz’s character. The serious message which was delivered at the climax was also useful.
After a fun filled first half and solid lead at the post interval, the film’s narration suffers with regular roadblocks. The jokes seem to be overdone and the scenes before and near the pre climax appear dragged. Because of this drop in the screenplay, the good message near the climax did not have the perfect impact.