
FryDay
- Director
- Abhishek Dogra
- Studio
- Inbox Pictures
- Release Date
- 11 October 2018
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹15.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹1.52 Cr
Review
Rajpal Yadav and Varun Sharma work hard to salvage what is essentially a one-joke premise stretched far too thin across its runtime. The chemistry between them crackles occasionally, and both actors display the kind of committed physical comedy that might have elevated a tighter, sharper script. Yadav in particular brings his trademark everyman desperation to Rajeev's character, making even the most predictable moments feel lived-in. However, the direction by Abhishek Dogra struggles to find the comedic rhythm necessary to sustain a farce of this nature—the pacing is sluggish, and what should be rapid-fire misunderstandings instead feel labored and repetitive.
The fundamental problem is that the film mistakes chaos for comedy. The burglar blackmail plot, the mistaken identity angle, the water purifier sales subplot—these could have interlocked neatly, but instead they collide clumsily, with the narrative often pausing to let characters explain jokes that weren't particularly funny to begin with. There are moments of genuine wit buried here, particularly when the film leans into absurdist territory, but these are few and far between. The supporting cast is largely wasted, and the film's attempts at emotional stakes feel cynically grafted on rather than organically earned. It's the kind of project where you can sense everyone involved trying to make something work, but the foundational script simply doesn't give them enough to build with.
Rating: 5/10
Storyline
So there's this guy Rajeev who sells water purifiers, and he's been totally bombing at his job. His boss basically tells him it's now or never, so he's desperate to make a sale. He decides to visit his buddy who owns a restaurant and uses it as a chance to pitch a purifier to Gagan, this stage actor guy whose wife is busy working for an NGO up in Shimla.
Gagan takes advantage of his wife being away and decides to invite a girl over to his place. But things get messy when a burglar shows up unexpectedly! The thief figures out what Gagan's up to and uses it as leverage to blackmail him. It's a pretty sticky situation that Gagan definitely didn't see coming.
Meanwhile, Rajeev calls Gagan's wife to confirm the sale, and she mentions her husband should be home. So Rajeev heads over to the house ready to close the deal, but he completely mistakes the girl for Gagan's wife. From there, everything spirals into this hilarious chain of misunderstandings and chaotic moments that nobody really planned for.




