Some trailers entertain, and then some trailers feel. Saiyaara belongs to the latter. In just 2 minutes and 43 seconds, this upcoming romantic drama from Mohit Suri pulls you into a world of passion, pain, and poetry. And if you’ve ever loved someone, lost someone, or even just loved a good heartbreak song, this one might stir something in you.
Ahaan Panday and Aneet Padda — two fresh faces, a classic love story, and a lot of emotional fireworks. Let’s talk about it.
Saiyaara Trailer

The trailer opens with a bang — literally. We meet Krish Kapoor (Ahaan Panday), a hot-headed, fiercely talented singer who doesn’t shy away from confrontation. One of the first scenes shows him beating up a music authority and shouting,
“Krish Kapoor. Don’t forget this name. Say it!”
This isn’t your usual brooding hero. He’s loud, angry, and feels every bit like someone trying to scream into a noisy world that keeps ignoring real talent.

Enter Vaani (Aneet Padda) — a soft-spoken lyricist who just wants to write, stay out of drama, and avoid late-night chaos. But of course, when she crosses paths with Krish, everything changes.
They make music. They fall in love. They create moments — little ones, magical ones. But as the trailer shows, their love story isn’t all roses and fairy lights. It takes a turn. A hard one. And that’s where Saiyaara starts to sting — in the best way.
Saiyaara Trailer Review

Let’s talk about the trailer itself — not just what’s in it, but how it makes you feel. Mohit Suri already revealed it is a story that was written for Aashiqui 3.
From the very first second, you feel it — this isn’t some sweet, sugar-coated love story. There’s a weight to it. A spark that tells you things are going to get intense, maybe even a little messy. Mohit Suri leans into what he knows best — love that burns, characters who are quietly falling apart, and music that says everything they’re too afraid to. The 2-minute 43-second trailer doesn’t just set the tone — it grabs your hand, pulls you into the chaos, and doesn’t let go.

It opens with Krish Kapoor calling out the influencer-driven music industry with anger and honesty. It’s raw and unfiltered.
The trailer moves fast — from strangers to collaborators to lovers to heartbreak. But the emotional weight never feels rushed. There’s a storm building behind every scene, and it keeps you glued.
Visually, it’s moody and atmospheric — rainy streets, smoky studios, and stolen glances. The kind of shots that make you want to pause and breathe it all in.

And then there’s the music — the kind that doesn’t just fill a scene, it fills something in you. Even in those few seconds, it hits you right where it hurts (or heals). You don’t need to see the whole film to know that these songs are going to stay in your headphones, in your voice notes, in those quiet little corners of your day.
With Mithoon, Sachet-Parampara, Vishal Mishra, Tanishk Bagchi, and others behind it, it already feels less like a soundtrack and more like something you’ll carry with you long after the credits fade. The songs Barbaad, Saiyaara, Humsafar, and Dhun are chartbusters. The score doesn’t just support the story — it elevates it. The trailer gives us just enough to care, but holds back enough to make us need more.
Saiyaara Performances

For a debut, Ahaan Panday steps in with fire. He’s not trying to play it safe — he goes all in. His portrayal of Krish is raw, emotional, and full of edge. The anger, the frustration, the passion — it all comes through in the smallest moments.
Aneet Padda as Vaani is the perfect contrast — soft, hopeful, and deeply expressive. Vaani doesn’t feel like a side character in Krish’s life — she feels like someone who’s lived a whole life before him. There’s something beautifully still about her, like she’s holding a storm quietly inside. You can see she’s not just writing lyrics — she’s writing pieces of herself into every word. And that makes her more than just his love interest — she’s his equal, maybe even his anchor.

When the two come together, it’s not this polished, fairytale kind of love. It’s unfiltered. It’s awkward, tender, intense — like two people bumping into each other with all their sharp edges exposed. Their chemistry doesn’t try to impress you. It just exists — messy, magnetic, and painfully real.
There’s something beautifully broken about Saiyaara. It’s a love story in the age of likes and views, but it doesn’t shy away from showing the cost of chasing dreams. Mohit Suri brings back the aching intensity of Aashiqui, but filters it through today’s lens, where love is loud, fragile, and constantly tested.
Watch the trailer here:
If this trailer is anything to go by, Saiyaara might just end up being the love story everyone’s talking about in 2025. It’s got passion, pain, and that unmistakable Mohit Suri magic that turns heartbreak into poetry. Saiyaara is arriving in cinemas on July 18, 2025.
Follow Cinetales for more updates, music breakdowns, and exclusive behind-the-scenes moments from Bollywood’s most anticipated love story.
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