Gustaakh Ishq Story, Review, Trailer, Release Date, Songs, Cast 2025

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Gustaakh Ishq Story :-

Nawabuddin goes to Malerkotla to convince the reclusive poet Aziz Beg to publish his forgotten poems and save his late father’s printing press.

Gustaakh Ishq Story, Review, Trailer, Release Date, Songs, Cast
Credits - IMBD

Gustaakh Ishq Release Date, Trailor, Songs, Cast :-

Release Date28 November 2025
LanguageHindi
GenreDrama
Duration2h 8min
CastFatima Sana Shaikh, Naseeruddin Shah, Vijay Varma, Sharib Hashmi, Meenakshi Chugh, Rohan Verma, Avar Brar
DirectorVibhu Puri
WriterVibhu Puri, Prasshant Jha
CinematographyManush Nandan
MusicVishal Bhardwaj
ProducerDinesh Malhotra, Manish Malhotra
ProductionStage 5 Productions
Certificate13

 

Gustaakh Ishq Review :-

Gustaakh Ishq carries an old-school charm and grace that today’s Bollywood rarely shows, or has simply left behind. The film isn’t in a rush to impress. Instead, it invites you to sink into its mood, its pauses, and its shayari. Its world is filled with the ‘tahzeeb’ and ‘adab’ that once defined Hindi cinema. The story moves slowly on purpose, allowing the place and its people to unfold in their own time. But despite its elegance and honesty, the film never fully reaches greatness. Even with talented actors like Naseeruddin Shah and Vijay Varma, it feels subdued. And for a film that calls itself a drama, it surprisingly lacks truly powerful or memorable moments.

Gustaakh Ishq Story, Review, Trailer, Release Date, Songs, Cast
Credits - Youtube

The story follows Nawabuddin (Vijay Varma), who is desperate to save the printing press his late father left behind. Hoping to restore its old reputation, he learns about the unpublished poetry of Aziz Beg, a talented writer who has always avoided fame. Aziz, now older and slowly losing his eyesight, lives a quiet life in Malerkotla with his daughter Minni (Fatima Sana Shaikh) and Attachie (Sharib Hashmi), the loyal helper he treats like family.

Nawabuddin visits Aziz pretending he wants to learn shayari. With Minni’s support, he tries to convince Aziz to publish his work, but the poet remains unmoved. Things get tense when Nawabuddin suddenly leaves for Delhi to handle family issues without telling Minni, who has grown close to him. The situation worsens when his brother decides to sell the press, forcing Nawabuddin to return to Aziz one last time in the hope of fulfilling his father’s final wish.

Gustaakh Ishq Story, Review, Trailer, Release Date, Songs, Cast
Credits - Youtube

In a time filled with loud action movies and formulaic horror comedies, Gustaakh Ishq feels refreshing. It brings the focus back to people, conversations, and small emotions. The quiet exchanges between Nawabuddin and Aziz form the heart of the film, and the shayari recited by Shah—written by Ashok Singh Mizaz—adds a gentle charm. Watching Shah and Varma together as mentor and student is a real delight.

But for a film built on drama and romance, neither element fully blossoms. The interval, which should feel like a major moment, passes without much impact. The love story between Nawabuddin and Minni is so understated that it sometimes feels secondary. The film has good intentions and creates the right atmosphere, but the screenplay rarely delivers the strong emotional highs it aims for.

Gustaakh Ishq Trailor :-

Naseeruddin Shah is the film’s strongest presence. His portrayal of Aziz Beg carries warmth, dignity, and a quiet tiredness, and the effortless way he delivers poetry is a real pleasure to watch. Those scenes linger long after. Vijay Varma plays Nawabuddin with honesty, though it sometimes feels like he’s holding back—some rough edges might have added depth. Fatima Sana Shaikh, though present through most of the film, doesn’t have much impact on the story. The Gulzar–Vishal Bhardwaj collaboration adds a gentle charm to the music, with “Ul Julool,” sung by Shilpa Rao and Papon, standing out. Director Vibhu Puri’s intentions are sincere, but the film loses pace because of uneven writing. The art direction hints at a Sanjay Leela Bhansali influence, yet the story never quite matches the visual richness.

Final Thought

Manish Malhotra’s debut as a producer is a gentle film, though it could have taken more emotional risks. It leaves behind moments of beauty in its poetry, music, and performances, even as the larger story feels uneven. It earns quiet appreciation rather than big applause. You remember certain scenes more than the film as a whole. And maybe that soft, slightly incomplete feeling is exactly what defines Gustaakh Ishq.

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