A new version of Hum dil de chuke sanam in which Aishwarya Rai murders Salman Khan accidently and Ajay Devgn aids in the cover-up, and they avoid the cops by selling a parallel untrue story. The first half is quite tedious, while the second half is very predictable. The acting of Tapsee and Vikrant is the sole redeeming feature of this film. If this film had been a short film or a 40-minute episode of Byomkesh Bakshi, it would have had a greater impact.
Tapsee's lover is killed (accidentally) by Vikrant and Tapsee (the husband and wife). Rishu (Vikrant) and Rani (Tapsee) cover it up by pretending Rishu is dead and that Rani and her lover Neel killed him. Neel managed to get away and is now on the run. The story is told in flashback after Rani is apprehended by the police. The first part focuses solely on Rishu and Rani's wedding; Rani is dissatisfied with her husband Rishi, and Rishi refuses to get intimate since he's attempting to win her heart. Then there's Rishu's cousin Neel, who has a nice body and works as a rafting instructor (or something like that).
They have an affair, and Neel then disappears without telling anyone. Rani tells Rishu about her romance with Neel, who is traumatized. Rishu, calmly enraged, confronts Neel, attempts to murder him with a screwdriver, is beaten up by Neel, and returns to Rani. That was the agonizing first half.
Rani stays with Rishu, feeling guilty, and asks for forgiveness. Rishu tries a variety of methods to harm her (or kill her). Rani falls in love with Rishu as a result of this. They fall in love, and everything is well until Neel returns and Rishu see them talking!! :D Rishu gets into a fight with Neel when he threatens the couple with revealing a video of him and Rani. While Rishu is being beaten up by Neel, Rani dashes to the kitchen, grabs a frozen lamb leg, and slams it into Neel, instantly killing him (the murder weapon is frozen lamb leg). The next 5-7 minutes of the film show how Rani and Rishu concoct a ploy by creating eye witnesses who claim to have seen Neel but not Rishu.
As is customary, the police uncover no evidence that Rani murdered her husband, and she is released. Throughout the film, there are nonsensical and pitiful lines from Dinesh Pandit's (the crime author) books, and individuals strive hard to land a few punches in a few sequences.