Review
This is exactly the kind of masala melodrama that Bollywood does when it's firing on all cylinders—a premise so audacious it borders on absurd, yet executed with enough heart and momentum to sweep you along. The four-brothers-unaware-of-each-other angle is pure gold, and the film milks genuine tension from their inevitable collisions: Bholaram the honest farmer versus Johny the thief, Vijay the cop forced to chase his own blood. The director understands the mechanics of reuniting separated families—there's real pathos in Radha's fragmented storyline, and the performances, particularly the leads inhabiting their dual identities, have enough charisma to carry you through some genuinely entertaining set pieces. Where it clicks, it really clicks.
But the film doesn't sustain that energy. By the second half, the plotting becomes a tangled mess—too many convenient coincidences, a climax that feels rushed, and a reliance on melodramatic contrivance when tighter writing could've made the same emotional beats land harder. The villain, Lalchand, is barely sketched in; he's a plot device rather than a genuine threat. Some supporting characters feel like padding, and there are stretches where the pacing drags. The film wants to be both a crime thriller and a family tragedy, and while both genres coexist here, neither feels fully realized. It's entertaining enough to keep you invested, but it's sloppy in ways that prevent it from becoming truly great.
Rating: 6/10
Storyline
Radha's living poor with her husband Mohan and their four sons when Mohan's wealthy father suddenly welcomes them back into the fold—only to reveal a fortune in gold and jewels hidden beneath a temple, locked away by four separate keys that he gives to his sons. But before the family can celebrate, Mohan's murdered by Lalchand, a scheming employee who'd overheard everything and wanted the treasure for himself. The tragedy shatters their world completely—Radha loses her grip on reality and gets separated from her boys, left broken and alone.
Years pass and the four brothers have become strangers to each other, each taking a wildly different path in life. Chandan runs an honest dairy farm as "Bholaram," while his younger brother Bablu climbed the ranks to become a righteous cop called "Vijay"—but their other two brothers went rogue, with Raju becoming the notorious thief "Johny" and Pappu turning into a small-time criminal known as "Tony." These four are now on a collision course, completely unaware they're brothers, with law and crime pulling them in opposite directions.
The genius setup is watching these four collide head-on while they have no clue about their shared past, their mother's anguish, or that buried treasure still waiting beneath the temple. Everything hinges on whether fate will bring them back together before it's too late—whether they'll reconnect with their shattered mother and finally unlock the secret that cost their father his life. It's a beautiful, heart-wrenching question mark hanging over this entire epic family saga.