The film is largely forgotten and rarely discussed. It occasionally appears on low-budget satellite TV channels or YouTube, viewed only for Govinda’s comic fragments.

At its core, the film belongs to the genre of "capers"—narratives built on misunderstandings, mistaken identities, and escalating chaos. The plot follows Pappu (Govinda), a simpleton from a village who becomes the ardent fan of a glamorous film star, Sapna (Rani Mukerji). The narrative driver is a classic Bollywood trope: the collision between the innocent, rural India and the cynical, fast-paced urban film industry. When Pappu’s grandmother falls ill and her last wish is to meet his idol, the stage is set for a series of misadventures that involve a murder, a lookalike, and the inevitable romance.

A simple young man who lives with his overbearing but wealthy grandmother, Dadi (played by the legendary Zohra Sehgal ). Pappu is a die-hard fan of the superstar Sapna and dreams of a life away from his grandmother's strict rules.

And the battle cry for that war? (Come, let us wage love.)