Bhabiji Ghar Par Hain – Fun on the Run Review: A Highway of Gags and Groans

Release Date : 06 Feb 2026



Fun if you surrender, exhausting if you try to resist.

Posted On:Friday, February 6, 2026

Director - Shashank Bali
Writer - Raghuvir Shekhawat, Shashank Bali, Sanjay Kohli, Vihaan Kohli
Cast- Aasif Sheikh, Rohitashv Gour, Shubhangi Atre, Vidisha Srivastava, Ravi Kishan, Mukesh Tiwari, Dinesh Lal Yadav
Duration – 135 Minutes
 
If you ever wondered what would happen if your favorite TV sitcom decided to go on a sugar-high road trip and forget it had to make sense, Bhabiji Ghar Par Hain – Fun on the Run is your answer. Directed by Shashank Bali, the film hits theaters with all the subtlety of a honking vintage car barreling down a mountain road. Starring Ravi Kishan, Mukesh Tiwari, Aasif Sheikh, Rohitashv Gour, Shubhangi Atre, and Vidisha Srivastava, this movie unapologetically leans into chaos and crassness—and never looks back.
 
From the opening frame, the film announces its priorities: punchlines first, plot maybe later. The story—if you can call it that—follows Angoori (Shubhangi Atre) wanting her husband Manmohan (Rohitashv Gour) to “level up,” prompting a parikrama in Uttarakhand. Of course, Vibhuti (Aasif Sheikh) tags along, because why not? Add in two testosterone-loaded brothers, Shanti (Ravi Kishan) and Kranti (Mukesh Tiwari), a vintage car with a dubious rental history, and a chase sequence that makes The Fast and the Furious look like a leisurely Sunday drive, and you have a recipe for cinematic chaos.
 
The humor is relentlessly broad—double entendres, toilet gags, banana-peel motorcycles, guns that fire at farts—and it hits like a comic sledgehammer. If you enjoy flinching at jokes that push the limits of taste and common sense, you’re in for a treat. Otherwise, your patience may be tested. It’s a slapstick buffet where the characters are barely allowed to breathe before the next absurdity arrives.
 
Performances are all over the place, but in the best kind of cartoonish way. Aasif Sheikh is your anchor amidst the madness, reacting to chaos like a man who’s seen it all (because, presumably, he has). Rohitashv Gour commits to the silliness, which mostly involves contorted faces and gas-related gags. Shubhangi Atre brings her trademark charm to Angoori, occasionally saving a joke with her quirky dialect, while Vidisha Srivastava is tragically underused, mostly existing to look concerned at her husband’s antics. Ravi Kishan and Mukesh Tiwari make brief, energetic appearances as the hair-obsessed and vengeful brothers, and Dinesh Yadav’s Nirahua is sadly wasted in a blink-and-you-miss-it cameo.
 
The movie seems less like a film and more like a “best hits” reel of TV sitcom absurdities stretched over two hours. It’s as if the scriptwriters threw every joke they’d been saving from the TV series into a blender, hit puree, and poured it onto Uttarakhand’s highways. The result? A comedy that sometimes feels like fun, sometimes like auditory assault. And yes, the item number featuring the male leads exists—because, why wouldn’t it?
 
Bhabiji Ghar Par Hain – Fun on the Run is for die-hard fans of the show, those with a high tolerance for ridiculousness, or anyone who loves laughing at jokes so over-the-top they become almost surreal. For everyone else… maybe take a pass. It’s loud, it’s silly, it’s occasionally funny, and entirely impossible to ignore. Like that uncle at a wedding who won’t stop dancing—you’ll either love it or quietly wonder why you’re still watching.
 



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