
Plan
- Director
- Hriday Shetty
- Studio
- Sanjay GuptaDharam Oberoi
- Release Date
- 9 January 2004
- Running Time
- 149 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹9.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹10.83 Cr
Review
Rishi Kapoor's "Plan" arrives as a competent heist-thriller that understands the Mumbai-aspirant narrative well enough to keep audiences engaged for its runtime, even if it rarely transcends the formulaic beats of its genre. The premise—four small-town men bonding through adversity and orchestrating an elaborate con—is familiar territory, but the film executes it with sufficient verve and character chemistry to justify its theatrical presence. Abhishek Bachchan carries the film with a naturalistic performance that grounds the increasingly outlandish plot, while his co-stars (Riteish Deshmukh, Bobby Deol, and Sanjay Dutt in an extended cameo) provide adequate support. The direction manages pacing reasonably well, particularly in the first half where the camaraderie feels earned rather than imposed, and the Mumbai setting is leveraged effectively as both backdrop and character.
Where "Plan" falters is in narrative ambition and thematic depth. The heist mechanics, while serviceable, lack the ingenuity or surprise that elevates the genre—we've seen sharper cons in far lighter films. The wealthy businessman antagonist remains a cardboard cutout, and the emotional stakes, particularly around why these friendships matter beyond convenience, never fully crystallize. The climactic con feels more like obligation than catharsis, and the resolution plays it safe when the setup promised something more morally complex. Kapoor's direction is workmanlike; it's a film that understands what i
Storyline
So basically, four guys from different towns all end up on the same train heading to Mumbai, and they hit it off immediately because they're all in the same boat—pretty much friendless when they arrive. Each one's got his own reason for being there: one wants to make it big in movies, another needs to collect a debt, one's hoping to strike it rich through gambling, and the last guy is trying to win back his ex. They quickly realize they're stronger together than apart, so they decide to stick around the city instead of heading home.
Things start off pretty promising for a bit—the gambling guy actually gets lucky and starts winning, and the group is living their best lives in Mumbai. But then everything goes sideways when they decide to go all-in on one massive bet, pooling whatever money they have left. The catch? The guy they're betting against turns out to be a total cheat, and now they're down nearly a million rupees with serious people expecting payment in just seven days. Oh, and they're not allowed to leave the city either.
Desperate times call for desperate measures, so the group starts scheming up what might be their only way out of this mess—a pretty bold and risky plan involving a wealthy businessman that could either save them or completely destroy everything. It's the kind of situation where these friends have to decide how far they're willing to go to protect each other and survive in the big city.



