Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], September 18: Bollywood does not often demure from presenting viewers a combination of drama, glamour, and a dash of improbability. Param Sundari, Janhvi Kapoor’s new romantic-drama, is no exception. While the movie tries to relate a love affair tracing from the Delhi streets to Kerala’s landscapes, it’s not the romance, nor even the music, that’s leaving viewers arguing. Rather, it’s one scene—one coconut tree climb—took over unexpectedly, commandeering headlines, memes, and Twitter discussions.
The debate? Whether Janhvi Kapoor’s daredevil ascent is “bold cinematic liberty” or “Bollywood’s favorite brand of unrealistic logic.” Netizens, as usual, wasted no time in delivering their verdict—half amusement, half outrage, and full entertainment.
A Film with Lofty Ambitions
Param Sundari is marketed as a cross-cultural love saga. Kapoor acts as a feisty young woman traversing the conflict of North and South Indian ways with her own identity. The story takes her from the rush of Delhi to the coconut-lined Kerala, where, in a scene designed to illustrate her pluck, she scales a coconut tree with admirable ease.
Director Raghav Varma obviously hoped this would be an allegorical moment: a young woman grasping for independence and roots simultaneously. But symbolism in Bollywood frequently conflicts with reality—and viewers seldom forgive such cinematic hubris without a meme storm.
The Scene That Became a Meme
What was supposed to be an empowering visual quickly morphed into a social media circus. Twitter (or X, for those insisting on new branding) was flooded with comments:
“Bollywood logic: you can’t cook rice without dramatic background music, but you can climb coconut trees in lehengas.”
“We Keralites train for years. Janhvi Kapoor does it between two songs. Respect.”
“Coconut water sales are about to skyrocket thanks to Param Sundari.”
Some users praised Kapoor’s dedication—rumours even claim she trained briefly with local stunt experts. Others dismissed it as tone-deaf cultural appropriation, asking why the industry insists on reducing regional practices into glossy props.
The Positives: Where the Film Shines
To give credit where due, Param Sundari isn’t entirely lost in the controversy.
Visual Splendor: The cinematography captures Kerala’s backwaters and Delhi’s bustling contrast with an eye for detail. The film looks stunning even when the script occasionally wobbles.
Music & Choreography: The soundtrack, composed by Amaal Mallik, has already climbed Spotify charts. Dance numbers, especially the titular “Param Sundari” track, are social-media-ready and TikTok-friendly.
Janhvi’s Commitment: Love her or lampoon her, Kapoor puts in visible effort. Her screen presence oscillates between vulnerable and fiery, making her the heartbeat of the project.
Cross-Cultural Message: Despite execution flaws, the intention of bridging North–South traditions deserves recognition.
The Negatives: Where It Trips
Still, the coconut tree debacle isn’t the film’s only stumbling block.
- Script Predictability: Apart from its cultural mix-up, the story adheres to tested Bollywood formulas: love collides with parental opposition, tradition confronts tradition, and reconciliation ensues. Audiences were quick to spot déjà vu.
- Unintended Comedy: A number of “serious” moments made audiences laugh in cinemas, not because of clever scripting but because of melodrama. The coconut tree incident was not intended as a comedy, but played like it.
- Shallow Representation: Kerala’s rich heritage is reduced to trite tropes—coconuts, boat races, Kathakali walk-ons—instead of thoughtful narrative.
- Uneven Pacing: At 2 hours 38 minutes, the film bumbles along. The first half delights, the second half overstays its welcome.
Box Office Pulse
Despite the controversy—or perhaps because of it—Param Sundari opened to strong weekend numbers. Multiplex audiences in metros reported houseful shows, though single screens in smaller towns saw middling turnout. By mid-week, collections dipped slightly, indicating that while curiosity was high, repeat value may be limited.
Trade analysts suggest the film could cross ₹100 crore if international markets hold steady. In the Gulf and US, Janhvi Kapoor’s star power among diaspora audiences seems to be giving the film an extra push.
Social Media Buzz Keeps It Alive
Interestingly, the coconut tree moment may have given Param Sundari more free publicity than its official campaigns. Memes, reels, and parody videos are ensuring the film remains trending. Marketing strategists will tell you: outrage today is often ticket sales tomorrow.
Kapoor’s fans passionately defend her, contending that she infuses Bollywood’s all-too-familiar formula with freshness. Critics say that she is, once again, protected by nepotism. The reality, as always, finds middle ground between admiration and skepticism.
The Larger Conversation
Underneath the coconut scandal lies a greater problem: Why is Bollywood still making authenticity optional? Cultural practices like tree-climbing are not only visual backdrops; they are real acts endowed with meaning. By skating over their realities, directors run the risk of alienating audience members who expect authenticity with the pan-Indianization of film.
And yet, it’s also to be kept in mind that film depends on hyperbole. The same people who mock a coconut tree scene readily accept weightless action stunts in masala cinema. Selective outrage? Maybe. Selective tolerance? Guaranteed.
Verdict
Param Sundari is not the film revolution it may have dreamed of being, but it is certainly fun. Janhvi Kapoor bears most of the weight with good faith, even if the script doesn’t always pay her back. The coconut tree might still be a sticking point for purists, but it has clearly guaranteed the film some place in 2025’s cultural discourse.
If you want rich imagery, good tunes, and a movie that makes you laugh and argue, shell out the cash for the popcorn. If you desire realism, perhaps forego the coconut palm—or better yet, find a tree of your own and judge just how realistic it is.