Starring Sonam Kapoor, Abhay Deol, Amrita Puri, Ira Dubey, Cyrus Shahukar, Arunoday Singh
 Directed by Rajshree Ojha
 Rating: ***
 The thing about shallow people from the beau monde is that they shouldn’t be played shallowly when brought to the screen.
  Sonam Kapoor in a ‘tailor’- made role (where more moolah seems to have  been spent on tailoring her chic outfits than on exploring the locations  , sound sights scents and , yes, sense of this embarrassing world of  excessive self-preening) gets the Jane Austen character right. Quite a  leap for the actress.
  When she had played the confused lover-girl in Saawariya Sonam had  imposed her own natural-born confusions on the character rendering it  shaky and disembodied.
 In Aisha Sonam is far more in control of her character’s misguided  emotional compulsions. The fact that the young actress knows this  label-centric designer world of chic shenanigans so well helps Sonam  master and contour her character’s art of self-deception in a way the  original author of the character would have approved.
 Sonam’s world harks back to Jane Austen’s giddy-headed British gentry  class where match-making was not idle chatter. It was religion.
When  placed in the neo-rich spiced-up politically-charged atmosphere of  Delhi Jane Austen’s characters seem to come alive in unexpected spurts  of sassy splendour and unbridled joie de vivre. You can’t help laugh at  these young often-aimless people’s selfimportance.
  Aisha is a 2-hour celebration of pre-nuptial rituals. Though no one  says it, every girl in the picture wants only one thing. And it isn’t  necessarily love, but somewhere close. The bristle and bustle of Delhi  come alive through the slender intellectual faculties of the  protagonists.
 Let’s not forget Jane Austen had applied great intellectual strength to her frail and shallow people.
Aisha  converts Austen’s world into a frail feisty frolicsome fashion fiesta  shot with an empowering affection for the natural light that bathes  these somewhat affected people.
The cinematography by Diego  Rodriguez and specially the songs and background music by Amit Trivedi  create a multi-hued skyline in this saga of sophomore socialites, their  loves, lovers and love tattle.
 Debutant director Rajshree Ojha gets into this world of titillating  trivia and designer dreams with a wink and smile that go a long way in  building a showcase around these metropolitan mannequins on a  singleminded match-making prowl.
The  casting is as dead-on as it can get. While the guys Abhay Deol, Cyrus  Sahukar and Arunoday Singh play the Brain, Nerd and Hunk with absolute  relish it’s the girls who keep you chuckling and tch-tch-ing.
 Neha Dubey and debutant Amrita Puri put in pitch-perfect performances as  sahelis bullied into alliances that seem manipulated on earth rather  than arranged in heaven. They have a bright future ahead, single or not.  
But the film belongs to Sonam Kapoor, make no mistake of that. She makes  the best of a rather rare opportunity for an Indian leading lady to be a  part of Bollywood film that salutes Victorian mores and Delhi’s elitist  affectations in one clean cool sweep.
 Engaging and endearing Aisha makes you wonder if there’s anything more important in the world than finding the right match.
  Maybe finding the right movie about finding the right match? 
  
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