
Naughty @ 40
- Director
- Jagmohan Mundhra
- Studio
- Srishti Creations| distributor = Gangani Multimedia Corporations
- Release Date
- 28 April 2011
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹10.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹1.94 Cr
Review
There's a certain desperation in "Naughty @ 40" that mirrors its protagonist's own predicament—both are trying so hard to be relevant that they lose sight of authenticity. The film attempts to mine comedy from a forty-year-old virgin's misadventures, but what could have been a tender exploration of loneliness and self-acceptance instead becomes a series of juvenile gags that feel more pitying than empathetic. The sleepwalking subplot, intended as a recurring comedic device, becomes tedious rather quickly, and we're left watching a man be humiliated across multiple scenes without ever truly understanding what drives his desperation or what he genuinely desires beyond the surface-level conquest narrative the film keeps pushing.
The performances feel constrained by a script that doesn't trust its audience with nuance. What we needed was a character study about a man learning to live with himself; what we got was a parade of failed seduction attempts played for cheap laughs. The eventual marriage to Gauri feels rushed and unearned—a narrative Band-Aid slapped onto a film that never bothered to develop real emotional stakes or chemistry between its characters. Director Sohail Khan's comedies have thrived when grounded in genuine human connection, but here the story mechanics feel hollow, and even the shift to Manali and married life lacks the warmth needed to salvage what came before.
The film's commercial failure reflects what audiences already sensed: there's no heart here, no
Storyline
So there's this guy Harvinder who's forty years old and still living with his parents in London, which is already pretty awkward. On top of that, he's never been with a woman and has this weird sleepwalking problem that keeps getting him into ridiculous situations at night. His dad gets so embarrassed about the whole thing that he actually tries to get his employee and some friends to help Harvinder out, but every attempt they make just turns into a complete disaster.
Harvinder's buddies keep trying to set him up with different women, but things just keep going hilariously wrong every single time. There's this incident at a massage parlor that goes south real quick, and he also develops feelings for a girl from his uncle's family, but his sleepwalking keeps sabotaging everything. The poor guy can't catch a break because no matter what happens, that nighttime wandering habit keeps ruining his chances with women.
Eventually the family decides to head to Manali, and somehow Harvinder ends up getting married to this younger woman named Gauri. She's got a playful, mischievous side that keeps causing all sorts of trouble, leading to some pretty entertaining moments in their relationship. From there, things start taking an interesting turn with how their marriage actually develops.



