
Crazy Cukkad Family
- Director
- Ritesh Menon
- Studio
- ProductionsPrakash Jha
- Release Date
- 15 January 2015
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹5.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹0.44 Cr
Review
Crazy Cukkad Family arrives with genuine ambition—a multi-character ensemble comedy set against the picturesque canvas of a hill station, anchored by the familiar premise of a fractured family forced to reunite. Director Abhishek Dudhaiya deserves credit for attempting something structurally ambitious, juggling four adult siblings, their respective neuroses, and a parade of supporting characters without letting the narrative collapse entirely. The film understands that family dysfunction can yield comedy, and there are scattered moments—particularly in the interplay between the bitter Archana and her hapless husband—where the writing finds authentic humor in marital dissonance and unmet expectations. The mountain setting is utilized well enough to give the piece a visual breather from standard Mumbai-centric narratives.
However, the film's fatal flaw is overambition without execution. With so many characters vying for screen time, none receives sufficient development; Pawan's criminal entanglement, Aman's financial pretense, and Chotu's mysterious years abroad feel like abandoned threads rather than character arcs. The supporting cast—the slow lawyer, the bumbling investigators—exist purely as comedic noise rather than meaningful contributors to the story. The central plot device of the will's condition feels contrived and arrives too late to salvage the meandering first half. The performances, while earnest, struggle against a screenplay that mistakes busyness for wit, and
Storyline
So basically, this quirky family comedy kicks off when the wealthy Mr. Beri falls into a coma, and his four scattered adult children have to rush back to their family home in the mountains. You've got Pawan, the oldest, who's basically a sketchy guy mixed up with some dangerous people. Then there's Archana, who's bitter about giving up her dreams for marriage and takes it out on everyone around her, especially her wimpy husband. And Aman shows up from New York with his American wife, acting like he's some big-shot photographer when he's actually broke and jobless.
The youngest sibling, Chotu, finally makes an appearance after being away studying in New Zealand for years, and honestly, nobody really knows what he's been up to. To make things even more chaotic, there's this whole cast of other wild characters hanging around—like a local girl from the village, a super slow lawyer, and some bumbling private investigators who just add to the complete madness of it all.
The real plot thickens when the family finds out there's one bizarre condition they need to fulfill before they can even open up the father's will. Everything spirals into hilarious chaos in this beautiful mountain setting, where you've got this completely dysfunctional family trying to navigate through their own drama and secrets while dealing with whatever's coming next.




