After the odd laughing incident, we cut to some unknown time later. Sunil and Kiran are heading off for a swim, and they invite Rahul to come along. He declines, and that's the end of that scene. Thanks, movie! We then go to an evening at a dance club. Not the frantic, flashing lights kind, but more of a ballroom feel (yes, they're playing the Richard Marx song again). The happy couple has a quiet little boogie as Rahul watches them from afar with a surprisingly benign look of "Awww, isn't that sweet?" on his face. Sunil takes Kiran over to a table, then walks out of the shot. Rahul sees his big chance, so he takes a flower from the vase at the bar and brings it over to where Kiran is seated. She smiles at him, takes the flower, then joins him on the dance floor.

Rahul is rather overcome by his good fortune, and stares off into space. He begins asking questions internally, wondering what his options were and how best to proceed. Well, given the choices that we are, there's only one clear path - it's time to sing! Rahul's daydreams take us into our next musical number, "Tu Mere Samne." During the course of this tune we get another one of Rahul's odd little fantasies about Kiran jumping around in a dark room as water pours out of a rain machine. To each their own, I suppose!

When the song ends, we fade back to the dance club. We see that Rahul never actually left the bar to begin with, and Sunil is still dancing with Kiran. Rahul poignantly touches the flowers that he imagined picking up, and we end the scene. The three friends then walk out of the bar, and find a group of drunken revelers outside sitting at a table. The troublemakers taunt the group, commenting on how there seem to be too many men guarding one lady.

One of the other hooligans makes a comment that since she's already got two men, why not add a few more? The other men all think this is hilarious, but Sunil and Rahul have other plans. They both storm over to the rowdy group and begin beating the tar out of them (to the strains of the hacked up Mortal Kombat theme again). Kiran looks on in horror, but not at Sunil. Rahul has the guy who made the most offensive comment on the ground and is repeatedly pounding him in the face, asking him what he said.

Sunil wraps things up with the other guys in a surprisingly well-done fight for him. He grabs Rahul by the shoulder and pulls him off of the bleeding assault victim and holds his arms at his sides until Rahul calms down a little. Kiran looks at him in complete shock as to why he'd react like that.

I guess we'll wait until morning to find out, since that's what we cut to. We join the group outside at their little backyard table. A couple of lines are missed by the subtitles, but we can put it together that Sunil asks Rahul why he flew off the handle like that. Rahul is visibly angry when he replies that people who cross limits don't deserve to live.

Sunil asks him who gave him the rights to decide where those limits are to be. After all, each man is free to do as he will. Barely able to contain himself, Rahul says that no one is allowed to misbehave with a woman in his presence. He then asks Sunil if he ever gets angry. With a dramatic sting on the soundtrack, Sunil tells Rahul that he does indeed feel that way, and would like to smash people to bits when that happens. As he is saying this, Kiran is tenderly resting her head on Sunil's shoulder and seems completely content. Odd!

She then stands up and says that she'll go get something to cool down these hot tempers, but Sunil stops her and says he'll get the drinks. He walks off, leaving Kiran and Rahul alone.

Page:   1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Afterthoughts