At the point when Gurunam Singh Dhillon (Manoj Phawa) had gone out on a limb the and moved base to Bombay from Punjab – with the expectations of becoming wildly successful in the city – he not just wedded the adoration for his life (Seema Bhargava), yet additionally acquired 22 bison. Slice to 1995, Papa Dhillon now has all that he had ever sought after and has fabricated Jai Matarani Doondh Bhandar with affection, dahi and loads of paneer (support yourselves: there's a ton of dairy reference in the film for all you lactose-narrow minded peeps).
However, one trademark attribute that he was unable to hand down to his solitary child, Suraj Singh Dhillon (Diljit Dosanjh), is his natural capacity to prevail upon young ladies. So when the covetous intellectual gets back the kundali of an English-talking, shorts-wearing young lady from Bhandup, the whole Dhillon tribe bounces with fervor. Not all that soon; a little somebody smells of ghee and should be avoided for acceptable. Various dismissals later, Suraj's bestie Sukhi, who just copies Amitabh Bachchan from his irate youngster stage, recommends he be the baddie that young ladies generally crave after. So when a possibility at long last gives her gesture, he loses that last flashing want to a bunch of photographs of him chugging brew.
Actors: Fatima Sana Shaikh, Manoj Bajpayee, Diljit Dosanjh, Abhishek Banerjee
Directors: Abhishek Sharma
Writers: Shokhi Banerjee (story by), Rohan Shankar (dialogue), Rohan Shankar (screenplay)
Producers: Shariq Patel