
Double Dhamaal
- Director
- Indra Kumar
- Studio
- Maruti Pictures
- Release Date
- 23 June 2011
- Running Time
- 140 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹29.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹70.54 Cr
Review
"Double Dhamaal" rides on the familiar mechanics of con-artist comedies, where the appeal hinges entirely on execution rather than novelty of premise. Director Indra Kumar delivers exactly what the formula demands—a high-octane caper packed with disguises, double-crosses, and slapstick moments—but the film struggles to elevate itself beyond surface-level entertainment. The narrative, while sufficiently convoluted to maintain momentum, relies too heavily on coincidence and convenient plot devices rather than genuine wit. Performances from the ensemble cast are serviceable; the actors commit to the chaos with adequate energy, though the script doesn't provide enough distinctive character moments to differentiate between the four leads. The production design and cinematography, particularly the Macau sequences, are glossy and competent, but technical competence cannot compensate for a thin emotional core or genuinely clever dialogue.
What's most telling is how the film's ₹70.54 crore box office—a 143% ROI—speaks to commercial calculation rather than artistic achievement. The movie knew its audience and delivered expected beats without risk or ambition. The elaborate revenge scheme in Macau devolves into predictable misunderstandings and contrived resolutions that feel more like filling runtime than storytelling. While the film isn't without moments of genuine humor, these are scattered and insufficient to overcome the cumulative weight of tired writing. For a director whose ave
Storyline
So basically, these four loser friends—Roy, Adi, Boman, and Manav—are total con artists trying to make a quick buck however they can. One day they spot their old rival Kabir flashing around in a fancy Mercedes, and they're like, "Okay, what's this guy's deal?" Turns out he's just living off his girlfriend's money, so they decide to blackmail him into making them business partners. Sounds like a genius plan, right? Spoiler alert: it's not.
Things get messier when Kabir introduces them to this hardcore gangster investor named Bata Bhai, and they convince him to throw money at Kabir's oil project. But surprise, surprise—Kabir and his girlfriend Kamini, along with his sister Kiya, are running their own scam! They steal the money and bounce out of the country, leaving our four friends to deal with an angry don. Talk about getting played.
So our boys aren't about to let that slide. They track Kabir down to Macau and come up with this elaborate scheme to get revenge and steal their money back. Everyone goes undercover in different disguises—one guy's pretending to romance Kabir's sister, another's playing his assistant, someone's a fake Gujarati investor trying to worm his way in, and there's all sorts of chaos happening. It's basically one big disguise party where nothing goes quite according to plan.



