
Titoo MBA
- Director
- Amit Vats
- Studio
- Beatrix Entertainment
- Release Date
- 20 November 2014
- Running Time
- 107 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹2.50 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹0.14 Cr
Review
"Titoo MBA" attempts to mine comedy from a protagonist's moral compromise, a premise with genuine potential in Hindi cinema's current landscape of exploring middle-class desperation. However, director Sarvesh Mewara's execution falters significantly. The film struggles to find tonal balance—it can't decide whether it's satirizing Titoo's predicament or sympathizing with it, resulting in a narrative that feels unmoored and increasingly tedious. The "unconventional job" premise, which should be the film's comedic or dramatic anchor, remains frustratingly vague and underexplored, suggesting the makers themselves were uncertain how to handle the material. While the Chandigarh-Jalandhar setting offers authentic regional texture, the writing fails to capitalize on it, defaulting instead to tired tropes about marital deception and family honor.
The performances don't elevate the material sufficiently. The lead actor delivers competent work but lacks the comic timing or dramatic depth needed to make Titoo sympathetic or entertaining—he comes across as merely anxious rather than conflicted or clever. The supporting cast, particularly the wife, remains underdeveloped, serving primarily as a plot device rather than a character with agency. Technically, the film is competent but uninspired, with cinematography that captures the Punjab landscape without adding visual interest or thematic resonance. The screenplay's inability to build meaningful stakes or character development—evident in
Storyline
So there's this guy named Titoo from Chandigarh who's absolutely determined to become a successful businessman and make it big. Like most dreamers, though, things never seem to go his way, and he finds himself buried in serious debt. Desperate to make ends meet, he ends up taking a job that's pretty unconventional and something most people wouldn't talk about openly. It's not exactly the kind of career move he'd want anyone knowing about, especially not his family.
Right in the middle of all this chaos, Titoo's family arranges for him to get married to a girl named Gulshan Kaur Grover from Jalandhar, and they have this big traditional wedding ceremony. Now he's stuck living this weird double life where he's trying super hard to keep his shady job a complete secret from his new wife. He's constantly paranoid that she's going to find out what he's really been up to, and it's clearly eating him up inside.
Well, as these things usually go in movies, his wife eventually discovers the truth about his secret career, and suddenly everything falls apart for poor Titoo. His carefully constructed web of lies comes crashing down, and he's left dealing with the fallout of his choices. From that point on, nothing is ever quite the same for him or his relationship.



