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From Amitabh-Abhishek to Boman-Kayoze: Bollywood families who brought real emotion to reel life



There’s something magical about sitting down to a movie and suddenly realising, wait a minute, that father and son onscreen? They’re actually father and son. No makeup tricks. No method acting. Just lived-in emotion, the kind you can’t fake.That’s what makes Kayoze Irani’s directorial debut Sarzameen a little more special. The film, which dropped this week on JioHotstar, is a taut, haunting story set in Kashmir, starring Prithviraj Sukumaran, Kajol and Ibrahim Ali Khan. But what’s got everyone a bit emotional is the presence of Boman Irani, who makes a heartfelt cameo in his son’s first film as director.And with Parents’ Day today (July 27), it feels like the perfect time to celebrate the Bollywood families who’ve turned movie sets into living rooms.Playing with powerLet’s start with the royalty. Amitabh and Abhishek Bachchan have shared the screen multiple times and not always in predictable ways.In Sarkar and Sarkar Raj, they’re the power duo, father and son ruling Mumbai’s underworld. Their chemistry is electric, almost too real. You’re not watching a script. You’re watching years of dinner-table debates, life lessons and unspoken expectations condensed into two hours.And then came Paa. If you haven’t seen it, here’s the twist, Abhishek plays the father and Amitabh, covered in prosthetics and emotional layers, plays his son with a rare disorder. It’s tender, strange and somehow completely believable.There’s something about how they look at each other on screen, like they’re saying things the script doesn’t spell out. That’s blood memory at work.One final scene, all too realMunna Bhai M.B.B.S. was a comedy, sure. But in the quieter moments between Sanjay Dutt and his real-life father Sunil Dutt, something cracked open.Sunil, playing a principled father trying to steer his rogue son, brought a kind of grace that felt personal. Their confrontation scenes weren’t just ‘acted’, they felt like overdue conversations between two people who’d seen a lot, separately and together.It was Sunil’s last film. And in a strange, poetic way, it gave him and Sanjay the kind of closure most families can only dream of.Building a universeIf Bollywood had a father-son dream team, it’d be Rakesh and Hrithik Roshan. When Kaho Naa… Pyaar Hai landed in 2000, it turned Hrithik into a sensation. But behind those killer moves and green eyes was a father directing every frame.Later, Rakesh built an entire sci-fi franchise (Koi… Mil Gaya, Krrish) around his son. Think about that— not just giving your kid a break, but crafting a cinematic world for them to thrive in.And Hrithik? Still says his dad is his ‘toughest critic’. Now that’s respect, bordering on fear, but in the most loving way.Like a Diwali dinnerDharmendra, Sunny and Bobby Deol might be Bollywood’s most visible father-son package deal. In Apne, they brought raw emotion to a story about legacy, loss and boxing. It felt like an old-school movie with real stakes, because, well, they were real.Then came Yamla Pagla Deewana, pure chaos, ridiculous plots and all three Deols hamming it up for the camera. You know what? It worked. Sometimes, you just wanna watch a family have fun.The Bhatt chemistryAnd then there’s Raazi, where Soni Razdan and Alia Bhatt share a few brief but powerful scenes as mother and daughter. You can see the restraint in their hugs, the caution in their goodbyes. That kind of nuance? Comes from years of real-life closeness.The new gen KapoorsIn Ek Ladki Ko Dekha Toh Aisa Laga, Anil Kapoor plays a conservative dad learning to accept his daughter’s truth, played by his real-life daughter Sonam Kapoor. The film is gentle and generous, giving space to messy emotions and awkward silences.Let’s not forget Pankaj Kapur and Shahid Kapoor, either. They haven’t done many films together, but when they do (like in Shandaar), there’s a lovely tension, like two people still figuring each other out. Because maybe they are.More than just rolesWhen families act together, there’s always a bit of risk. What if the chemistry doesn’t land? What if it feels forced? But in the best cases, it feels like we’re being let in, just for a moment, on something incredibly personal.So this Parents’ Day, maybe skip the sappy greeting card. Instead, pick a film that feels familiar. Sit with your parents. Laugh at the awkward jokes. Tear up at the big speeches. You don’t even have to say anything.Sometimes, just pressing play is enough.

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