The ensemble chemistry remains the film's greatest strength: Varun Sharma (Choocha):
✨ Richa Chadha as Bholi Punjaban: She commands the screen! Watching her navigate politics while dealing with the Fukras is pure gold. ✨ The "Dream" Logic: Without spoiling anything, the way they’ve expanded Choocha’s powers is hilariously absurd—in the best way possible. ✨ The Comedy of Errors: The theater was laughing non-stop during the car scene and the "dinosaur" moments. Classic Fukrey timing! Fukrey 3
The film’s central mechanic—Choocha’s urine-powered prophetic dreams—is absurd. But treat it as a metaphor for startup valuation . The boys have no product, no plan, and no logic. They just have a "dream" (literally) that someone will pay them crores. Fukrey 3 mocks the modern hustle culture where we confuse a lucky break with a sustainable business model. Every time they rely on Choocha’s dream, they are gambling their entire future on a random number generator. It’s funny until you realize that’s exactly how the stock market and most influencer brands work. The ensemble chemistry remains the film's greatest strength:
Unlike the first film’s "Ambarsariya" or "Mein Tera Hero," Fukrey 3 lacks a chartbuster. The music by Tanishk Bagchi and Abhishek Nailwal works in the background but doesn't linger in your memory after you leave the theater. The wedding song in the third act feels forced, likely inserted to give the actors a dance break rather than to advance the plot. ✨ The Comedy of Errors: The theater was
Let’s be honest. The Fukrey franchise belongs to Varun Sharma. His portrayal of Choocha—the sweet, dim-witted, flatulent sidekick—is a masterclass in physical comedy. In Fukrey 3 , his character gets a significant upgrade. His "dreams" are no longer just for winning lotteries; they become the central MacGuffin of the political thriller aspect of the film.
is contesting elections on a platform focusing on Delhi’s water crisis, secretly backed by the nefarious water tanker mafia. The Rivalry