
Patel Ki Punjabi Shaadi
- Director
- Sanjay Chhel
- Studio
- Bholenath Movies
- Release Date
- 14 September 2017
- Running Time
- 120 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹11.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹2.54 Cr
Review
"Patel Ki Punjabi Shaadi" attempts the well-worn formula of inter-cultural wedding comedy, banking on the inherent charm of Punjabi-Gujarati contrasts to carry it through. Vir Das, who has shown considerable comic timing in his stand-up work, brings earnestness to the role, though the script often feels like it's pushing him through motions rather than allowing him to breathe. The debutante lead does her best with limited material, and there are moments—particularly in the family dinner sequences—where genuine warmth peeks through the manufactured chaos. However, the film's central problem is that it mistakes loudness for humor; what should be subtle cultural observation devolves into caricature, with neither the Punjabi nor Gujarati families given enough dimensionality to feel like anything more than cardboard cut-outs of their respective stereotypes.
Director's handling of tone is uneven, lurching between heartfelt moments about family acceptance and slapstick that feels dated even by mainstream Bollywood standards. The romance between the leads lacks spark—there's no real tension or chemistry to make us invest in whether they should be together, and by the time the wedding festivities arrive, we're simply watching time pass rather than rooting for outcomes. What could have been a clever exploration of how traditions evolve and blend together instead settles for surface-level jokes about accents and food preferences. The film's financial performance suggests audiences sens
Storyline
So basically, this movie follows two guys from completely different backgrounds—one's a Punjabi and the other's a Gujarati—who end up becoming connected through their kids' upcoming wedding. It's all about how these two families come together, and you can already imagine the cultural clashes and hilarious moments that are bound to happen when such different groups try to blend their traditions.
The female lead is making her debut in this film, playing the Gujarati guy's daughter who's basically the love interest of the Punjabi guy's son. You've got Vir Das stepping into that son's role, so there's definitely going to be some fun romantic storyline mixed in with all the family drama and wedding chaos that comes along with it.
It's basically a story about how love and marriage bring together people from vastly different worlds, and all the interesting (and probably amusing) situations that pop up when Punjabi and Gujarati traditions collide. The whole vibe seems to be about breaking boundaries and finding common ground between these two very distinct cultures.




