Matei organizes a secret screening in a village barn. Romanians and Indians sit together. When the film ends and the title card appears – “O dataă fericiți, O dataă tristi” – an old Indian woman (the real-life daughter-in-law) stands up and says in broken Romanian:
“Tradus în Română cu inimă. Pentru toți copiii care se întorc acasă.” (Translated into Romanian with heart. For all children who return home.) A fusion of “Suraj Hua Maddham” and the Romanian lullaby “Culcă-mă, mamă” – sung by a Roma choir in minor key. This story reimagines the classic Bollywood film as a bridge between two cultures, showing that translation is not just about language – it’s about love, loss, and the universal ache of family.
Matei becomes obsessed. He tracks down Ruxandra – now an elderly woman living in a village in Maramureș. She confesses: she translated the film secretly for her own family, because her son had left Romania for India, married an Indian woman, and was disowned by her husband.
He threads the projector. The screen flickers to life: a golden-lit London mansion, a rich Indian family, and a young man (Rahul) defying his father for love. But the subtitles are… different.
In a small, dusty cinema museum on Calea Victoriei, an old Romanian film archivist named discovers a forgotten can of 35mm film. The label reads: “Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham – Subtitrat în Română, 2002.”
The screen fades to black. The last subtitle reads:
She opens a wooden box. Inside: letters, photos, and a DVD labeled “Pentru iertare” (For forgiveness). Her son had returned. The Romanian Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham had healed a real family.
“Acum suntem toți… fericiți.” (Now we are all… happy.)
O dataă Fericiți, O dataă Tristi (Once Happy, Once Sad – the literal, poetic Romanian translation of Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham)