
Rabba Main Kya Karoon
- Director
- Amrit Sagar Chopra
- Studio
- Sagar Pictures Entertainment
- Release Date
- 1 August 2013
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹11.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹1.44 Cr
Review
There's something deeply troubling about a film that mistakes moral bankruptcy for comedy. "Rabba Main Kya Karoon" attempts to build its entire narrative around the "wisdom" of infidelity—positioning marital betrayal as harmless family tradition passed down through generations. While the premise could have worked as sharp social satire, director Abhishek Dudhaiya treats this toxic philosophy with a lightness that feels dangerously irresponsible. The performances, particularly the chemistry between the leads, hint at what could have been a meaningful exploration of marriage and commitment, but instead we get a film that laughs *with* its cheaters rather than *at* them. The uncles become comedic mascots of a deeply flawed worldview, and by the film's end, we're supposed to find their "ancient wisdom" endearing rather than reprehensible.
What makes this particularly frustrating is the wasted potential of its premise. A Bollywood film that genuinely questioned patriarchal attitudes toward marriage and fidelity could have resonated with audiences navigating their own relationship struggles. Instead, "Rabba Main Kya Karoon" chooses the easier path—wrapping regressive values in wedding songs and family drama, hoping nostalgia and humor will mask the hollowness at its core. The younger brother's conflict between tradition and his own conscience could have been compelling, but the screenplay doesn't give his internal struggle the depth it deserves. We're left with a film that enterta
Storyline
So basically, you've got these two brothers getting ready for these big, fancy Indian weddings in Delhi, which is already pretty chaotic if you've ever been to one of those things. The younger brother Sahil is super excited because he's marrying his childhood sweetheart, but then his older brother Shrawan shows up and things take a turn. Shrawan starts giving him all this "helpful advice" about how to be a married man—except it's basically telling him to cheat on his wife!
Here's where it gets funny and messed up at the same time. Shrawan isn't just making this stuff up—he learned it from their uncles, who are basically these old guys with this hilarious philosophy that cheating is the secret ingredient to a happy marriage. They're completely serious about it too, like it's some ancient family wisdom or something.
So the whole movie seems to be about this clash between what Sahil actually wants his marriage to be and what his brother and uncles are trying to pressure him into believing. It's one of those Bollywood comedies that takes something totally outrageous as its main premise and just runs with it, mixing family drama with laughs and probably some solid life lessons hidden in there somewhere.



