
Ghoomketu
- Director
- Pushpendra Nath Mishra
- Studio
- Phantom FilmsSony Pictures Networks Productions
- Release Date
- 21 May 2020
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
Review
Rishab Dhawan's *Ghoomketu* attempts to weave together a coming-of-age narrative with family drama and mistaken-identity comedy, but the execution falters where ambition should soar. The film's central premise—a small-town dreamer escaping to Mumbai to pursue writing while inadvertently hiding under the nose of the very cop tasked with finding him—contains genuine comedic potential and thematic richness about parental expectations versus personal aspirations. However, the screenplay struggles to balance its competing tones, shifting uneasily between broad slapstick involving the patriarch's tyranny, romantic misadventure through an accidental marriage, and the tense cat-and-mouse game between protagonist and antagonist. The film's strongest asset is its exploration of family dysfunction and the generational conflict that forces young people toward rebellion, a theme that resonates in contemporary Hindi cinema.
What ultimately undermines the film is its unfocused narrative structure, which scatters energy across too many subplots without giving sufficient weight to any single dramatic thread. The thirty-day countdown provides external stakes, but the internal journey of Ghoomketu as a writer remains surprisingly underdeveloped—we see his dreams articulated but rarely his actual creative struggle or growth. The supporting characters, including the aunt who becomes his patron and the bumbling police officer, feel more like functional plot devices than fully realized figures. Wh
Storyline
So this guy Ghoomketu dreams of being a writer and comes from this small village in UP where his dad is basically a tyrant who nobody takes seriously. His older brother somehow became a big shot politically but still gets bossed around by their father, and the whole family dynamic is just messy and chaotic. Then there's this whole wedding disaster where our hero accidentally marries the wrong woman and doesn't even bother looking at her face for ten days because he's so upset about it.
His family is completely against him chasing his writing dreams, but his aunt is his only real supporter. She secretly gives him some cash and tells him to go to Mumbai for a month to make something of himself. The problem is he just vanishes without telling anyone where he's going, so his family freaks out and files a police complaint, putting pressure on the cops to track him down within thirty days.
Meanwhile in Mumbai, some lazy and corrupt police officer gets assigned to find this missing guy, and if he doesn't locate him within a month, he's getting punished with a terrible posting. Through this crazy twist of fate, Ghoomketu ends up crashing at this officer's tailoring shop at night. The cop has no photo to work with so he has absolutely no idea that the guy he's supposed to find is literally living under his nose the whole time.