Badmaash Company (Hindi)

Release Date:
May 07, 2010

Life in the 1990’s was remarkably different for the average Indian. Consumerism had not set in. It was devoid of most of the luxuries of the West. In fact everything “imported” was good, and everything Indian, passé.

Badmaash Company is an extraordinary story set in the 1990’s in middle class Bombay (as it was known then), of four ordinary youngsters – Karan (Shahid Kapoor), Bulbul (Anushka Sharma), Zing (Meiyang Chang) and Chandu (Vir Das) – who came together to start an import business of things longed for by yuppie Indians!

What made their venture such a stupendous success was the fact that they found a way to beat the system and soon became the undisputed kings in their business, realising their one dream of making quick money by doing all the wrong things… the right way!

Living the life of champagne wishes and caviar dreams, the four friends discover that to make a business successful you don’t need big money.

All you need is a big idea!

With their larger than life schemes, the four go on a wild roller-coaster ride into the world of sheer glitz and glamour where the stakes are high and risks even higher!

All was well and hunky dory till one day the four maverick entrepreneurs are forced to shut shop… until they come up with yet another perfect plan to beat the system... Just one more time...!

Life in the 1990’s was remarkably different for the average Indian. Consumerism had not set in. It was devoid of most... Show More

Do you think you know what a Badmaash Company is like? I don’t think so. The true Badmaash Company is YRF. A production house boasts of a lineage like Kabhie Kabhie, Kala Patthar, Silsila, Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jayenge etc. has turned renegade. How else can you explain the likes of New York, Dil Bole Hadippa, Pyaar:Impossible & Badmaash Company? Its high time the viewers stopped giving them the credit they held long back, but themselves negated over the last few years, and don’t deserve it anymore. Its high time YRF realises that it needs to win back the trust of movie-goers before they can claim to be a production house of value. And it’s high time I end. Any more and whatever I’ve held back so far will pour out and the content won’t be suitable for viewers of all ages.