Big Brother

Big Brother

AverageActionDramaRomanceCrime
Director
Guddu Dhanoa
Studio
Bhagwan Chitra Mandir
Release Date
12 April 2007
Language
Hindi
Country
India
Budget
8.00 Cr
Box Office
7.09 Cr

Cast

Review

5/10Critic Score

Sunny Deol shoulders this ambitious vigilante drama with the kind of earnest intensity that has become his trademark, and it's precisely that commitment that prevents *Big Brother* from becoming entirely forgettable. The premise—a wronged family in witness protection who transform their personal vendetta into a larger crusade—carries genuine potential, but director Abitosh Srivastava squanders it through meandering narrative construction and tonal inconsistency. The film struggles to balance intimate family drama with large-scale social commentary, resulting in neither landing with significant impact. The supporting cast, including the matriarch whose maternal push catalyzes the central conflict, functions adequately within the framework, but character development feels surface-level at best. What could have been a substantive exploration of justice and collective uprising instead feels like a series of disconnected sequences held together primarily by Deol's screen presence.

The technical execution is competent but uninspired—the cinematography captures Mumbai's geography without extracting any distinctive visual language, and the editing pacing occasionally drags when momentum is essential. More problematically, the script fails to convincingly establish why ordinary citizens would rally behind this protagonist beyond generic appeals to victimhood. The film's box office performance (₹7.09 crore with negative returns) reflects what audiences ultimately sensed: earnest effor

Rahul Mehta, Bollyhits ↗

Storyline

So there's this regular middle-class family living peacefully in Delhi with Sunny Deol as the main guy, his wife, mom, younger brother, and sister. But then something pretty serious happens that completely flips their world upside down, and they're forced to pack up and start over in Mumbai under assumed identities. They're trying to build a new life and things seem to be going okay for a while.

But of course, their past comes back to haunt them when they least expect it. It gets messy enough that Sunny's mom basically pushes him to do something about what happened to them. What starts as a personal mission to settle scores actually becomes way bigger than just their family drama.

The whole thing transforms into this massive movement that catches on with regular people—especially women and vulnerable folks who feel like he's fighting for them. By the end, he becomes kind of a hero figure for everyone who's been wronged, and people start calling him their "Big Brother" as a sign of respect and gratitude.

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