
Bobby Jasoos
- Director
- Samar Shaikh
- Studio
- Reliance EntertainmentBorn Free Entertainment
- Release Date
- 4 July 2014
- Running Time
- 121 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹26.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹20.38 Cr
Cast
Review
Vidya Balan deserves considerable credit for bringing infectious energy to Bobby Jasoos, a film that understands the appeal of a spirited female protagonist navigating both detective work and family expectations in Old Hyderabad. Director Samar Shaikh crafts moments of genuine charm—particularly in the early sequences where Bobby's disguises and street-smart investigative techniques feel refreshingly inventive for mainstream Hindi cinema. The film's attempt to blend a light-hearted caper with questions about morality and loyalty shows ambition, and Balan's comic timing carries several scenes that might otherwise have felt forced. However, the narrative struggles to maintain coherence once the central mystery deepens; the subplot involving the local troublemaker and the moral dilemma feels grafted on rather than organically woven, and the film loses momentum precisely when it should tighten. The supporting cast, including Raj Babbar and Ali Fazal, performs adequately but lacks the sharpness needed to elevate thin character writing.
What ultimately hampers Bobby Jasoos is the tonal inconsistency between its first and second halves. The first hour establishes a breezy, playful detective romp that audiences could enjoy on its own terms, but the shift toward murkier ethical questions arrives without sufficient groundwork, making the transition jarring rather than impactful. The climax attempts to tie together Bobby's personal growth with her moral awakening, yet neither thread fe
Storyline
So there's this girl named Bobby living in Old Hyderabad with her pretty traditional family, and she's absolutely obsessed with becoming a private detective. She's been doing small neighborhood cases for a while now, but nothing major—just helping people out with little problems here and there. Everything changes when this wealthy guy shows up and gives her a real assignment: find two missing girls. Bobby goes all out with different disguises and techniques to crack the case, and honestly, it's pretty fun watching her get creative with her investigations.
After successfully finding those girls, the rich guy keeps hiring Bobby for more cases and paying her really well. But then things get complicated because her family decides to set her up with this TV host guy she knows, and neither of them is thrilled about it. At the same time, a local troublemaker approaches Bobby asking her to break up someone's marriage, and he starts making her question whether she's actually doing the right thing by working for the NRI guy. Bobby gets worried that maybe she's been on the wrong side of things all along.
As Bobby digs deeper into what's really going on, she finds herself caught between solving mysteries and figuring out what's actually moral. The case becomes way more complicated than she initially thought, and she has to navigate through lies, loyalties, and her own family drama while trying to do the right thing.



