
Ikke Pe Ikka
- Director
- Raj Sippy
- Studio
- Mudra Arts
- Release Date
- 11 October 1994
- Language
- Hindi
- Budget
- ₹1.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹9.35 Cr
Review
Ikke Pe Ikka arrives as a surprisingly engaging family comedy that understands the assignment of its premise—a father's misguided interference in his sons' love lives spirals into delightful chaos. Director Anurag Singh manages to extract genuine humor from what could have been a one-note concept, particularly in the cat-and-mouse games between the father and brothers, and more importantly, in the unexpected romantic subplot that gives the central gimmick actual emotional stakes. The performances anchor the film well; there's a lived-in quality to the family dynamics that prevents the plot from feeling entirely contrived, even when the father's scheme stretches credibility. What works best is the film's willingness to let its characters learn and grow rather than remain caricatures—the father's realization about control and trust feels earned rather than preachy.
However, the execution doesn't always match the promise of the premise. The second act meanders through repetitive comedy beats when sharper writing could have tightened the narrative considerably, and some supporting characters feel undercooked despite their presence throughout. The romance between the father and the girls' mother, while the film's secret weapon, needed perhaps five to ten more minutes of genuine character work to land with the impact it deserves. The comedic timing is hit-or-miss; certain sequences land beautifully, while others rely on slapstick that feels dated. Yet one must credit the film for
Storyline
These three brothers are absolutely smitten—they've announced engagements to three gorgeous sisters and everything's perfect! But then their father steps in like a total curmudgeon, convinced his sons are complete man-children who'll wreck these marriages. He's so determined to stop the weddings that he pulls off this absolutely bonkers scheme: he proposes to the girls' mother himself, figuring if he marries her, he'll be their stepfather and can just shut the whole thing down!
What follows is absolute chaos as the father's sneaky plan starts unraveling in the messiest ways possible. The brothers catch wind of what's happening and lose it—there's this fantastic tension between their love for their father and their fury at his interference. Meanwhile, the girls' mother is genuinely charmed by him, and suddenly nobody knows what's real anymore; the father's playing a dangerous game where he's actually falling for this woman he only approached to sabotage!
Everything comes to a head when the father finally sees his sons' genuine love and realizes he's been a total control freak. He backs off the engagement to the girls' mother—not without some hilarious awkward moments—and blesses all three couples! The film wraps up with weddings galore, and you just feel so good watching these brothers finally get their happy endings while their father learns that sometimes you've gotta let go and trust the people you love.

