At a time when the box office menu is brimming with masala entertainers, Ek Din tastes like a palate cleanser, blending mood and memory with a touch of magic. A gentle, heart-tugging alternative to spectacles and morally twisted love stories, the film leans into a quiet, introspective, and emotionally tender atmosphere. Set amidst the corroding corporate culture, where relationships tend to be transactional, it explores how a single shared memory or a single day of connection can feel like an entire relationship. Not a fantasy but a light whimsical sprinkle that makes the impossible feel real, raising questions about identity, fate, truth, and what lingers when everything else fades.
A faithful remake of the Thai film, One Day, Ek Din, reminds one of Saiyaara. If the quirk of memory provided a villainous sting to Saiyaara, here it turns out to be a gentle teacher that gives the romance its melancholic edge, love its impermanence. And like the young leads of the Mohit Suri film, it hinges heavily on Junaid Khan and Sai Pallavi to make the longing, the magical one day, and the bittersweet aftermath feel transparent and believable.
Sai Pallavi and Junaid Khan in ‘Ek Din’
| Photo Credit:
Aamir Khan Talkies

The plot is simple. Dinesh or Dino (Junaid), a shy, introverted office colleague, silently pines for the vibrant Meera (Sai in her Hindi debut) but lacks the courage to confess, until a company trip to Japan brings them under a mystical fortune bell. He impulsively wishes for just one day with her as his own — and the wish manifests through a twist of memory, granting him 24 hours of intimacy, shared wonder in scenic Japan, laughter, and deepening connection.
Much like Sai’s presence, the Japanese setting serves as both a novelty and a tonal anchor. The setting’s pristine white, ordered serenity, and polite distance mirror the fragile, temporary nature of Dino’s constructed intimacy. Where Sai brings an incandescent spontaneity, Junaid Khan responds with a disciplined stillness, creating a captivating tension. We know where it is kind of headed, but the emotional undulations of the journey keep us invested.
Ek Din (Hindi)
Director: Sunil Pandey
Cast: Sai Pallavi, Junaid Khan, Kunal Kapoor, Kavin Dave
Runtime: 125 minutes
Storyline: A diffident Dino silently pines for his out-of-league colleague Meera but lacks the courage to confess. During their company trip to Japan, he wishes at a fortune bell for just one day with her as his girlfriend.

With remakes, the emotional translation is often the make-or-break factor, and director Sunil Pandey handles it quite well. Writers Sneha Desai and Spandan Mishra have adapted the fragility of young love, the ache of impermanence, and gentle payoffs into an Indian cultural and linguistic context without diluting its soul or turning it overly melodramatic. The core ingredients feel intimate and believable. For instance, Meera’s fascination for Japan is rooted in her childhood, and Nakul (Kunal Kapoor as the third angle in the love story) only gives it wings. Dino doesn’t become a stalker — and instead evolves into a character defined by vulnerability and shared consequence. In fact, Dino becomes more of a metaphor for him belonging to a different age.
Junaid is refreshingly honest in reflecting Dino’s ordinariness, and that very honesty becomes the film’s ethical spine. Produced by Junaid’s father, Aamir Khan, one could see that the screenplay is structured strategically to conceal or minimise Junaid’s acting limitations. The screenplay casts him as an invisible, stiff office colleague who is intentionally low-energy and socially inept, yet carries a noble soul and a curiosity to understand the world. This trope allows stiffness or limited range to read as character choice rather than a performance flaw.

Junaid Khan and Sai Pallavi in ‘Ek Din’
| Photo Credit:
Aamir Khan Talkies

Sai’s emotionally agile performance as Meera carries most of the film’s warmth, chaos, and heartbreak. She elevates what might have been a clever gimmick into something closer to adult tenderness. Her natural Tamil-inflected Hindi works beautifully in the service of Meera and strengthens the film’s emotional translation as a remake. She completely belongs to the changing demographic of South Indians working in the Noida–Gurugram IT corridor. More importantly, her luminosity doesn’t erase the moral unease around consent — it makes that unease more poignant. Her eyes are not windows to an unguarded soul — they are precisely calibrated instruments. They speak only as much as the screenplay permits, never more. For eyes tired of watching manufactured dazzle with zero interiority, Sai comes across as a whiff of fresh air.
The story is designed so that her struggle with memory and resulting confusion creates the drama and chemistry. Junaid mostly reacts — a safer space for a newcomer. The good thing is that the film’s architecture is remarkably intuitive, carving out a space where affection flourishes in its distilled form — unspoken, yet resonant. A little more melody in the symphony would have lent the denouement a harmonic shimmer, but still quite a day.
Ek Din is currently running in theatres
Published – May 01, 2026 01:26 pm IST