Bhabiji Ghar Par Hain Review {1.5/5} & Review Rating
Star Cast: Ravi Kishan, Mukesh Tiwari, Dinesh Lal Yadav, Aasif Sheikh, Rohitashv Gour, Shubhangi Atre, Vidisha Srivastava

Director: Shashank Bali
Bhabiji Ghar Par Hain Movie Review Synopsis:
BHABIJI GHAR PAR HAIN is the story of two couples on the run. Vibhuti Narayan Mishra (Aasif Sheikh) lives with his wife Anita Mishra (Vidisha Srivastava) in Modern Colony, Kanpur. Their neighbour is Angoori Tiwari (Shubhangi Atre) and her husband Manmohan Tiwari (Rohitashv Gour). While Vibhuti is infatuated with Angoori, Manmohan is smitten by Anita Mishra (Vidisha Srivastava). One day, Angoori tells Vibhuti that she wishes to go to a temple in Uttarakhand to pray that her husband becomes braver. Vibhuti offers to take her to Uttarakhand. Both leave for the hill state without informing their respective spouses. Vibhuti hires a vintage car to travel to the temple. On the way, they come across a dreaded gangster, Shanti Sharma (Ravi Kishan) and his brother Kranti Sharma (Mukesh Tiwari). Shanti falls in love with Angoori at first sight and tries to form a relationship with her. Vibhuti objects to his behaviour and both attack each other. In the ensuing madness, Vibhuti accidentally burns Shanti's hair. In anger, Shanti shoots Vibhuti on his but butt but the latter manages to escape with Angoori. He informs Anita about his injury. She gets worried and asks Manmohan to join her in locating their respective spouses. Angoori recklessly drives the vintage car and ends up damaging it. As a result, the owner of the car, Bacchu Shukla (Dinesh Lal Yadav aka Nirahua) also gets enraged and begins chasing the couples. What happens next forms the rest of the film.
Bhabiji Ghar Par Hain Movie Story Review:
Raghuvir Shekhawat, Shashank Bali and Sanjay Kohli's story is cliched but had the trappings of a fun entertainer. Raghuvir Shekhawat, Shashank Bali and Sanjay Kohli's screenplay (additional screenplay by Vihaan Kohli) is insipid as most of the jokes fall flat. Raghuvir Shekhawat's dialogues have traces of humour and save the film from becoming a disaster.
Shashank Bali's direction is okay. He establishes the character and setting neatly and also ensures that the film looks grander than the TV show. Some jokes do manage to raise laughs. The scene where Shanti's hair gets burnt by an ember is genuinely funny.
Sadly, the funny bits are few and far between. The film is based on a TV show which has a huge following because of its clever comedy. That kind of humour is sadly missing in the film. What's shocking and even disappointing is to see toilet humour every 5-10 minutes into the narrative. Instead of amusing viewers, it disgusts them. In the climax, a horror comedy angle is forced and it further derails the film.
Bhabiji Ghar Par Hain! – Movie Trailer | Ravi Kishan | Shubhangi Atre | Aasif Sheikh | In Theatres 6th Feb 2026
Bhabiji Ghar Par Hain Movie Review Performances:
Shubhangi Atre impresses the most with her innocence and faux pas. Aasif Sheikh comes next and his comic timing is spot on. Rohitashv Gour, who's shown having stomach trouble throughout the film, is quite disappointing. Vidisha Srivastava doesn't get much scope. Ravi Kishan and Mukesh Tiwari deliver sincere performances. Dinesh Lal Yadav aka Nirahua (Bacchu Shukla), Brijendra Kala (Mamaji), Yogesh Tripathi (Daroga Happu Singh), Saanand Verma (Anokhelal Saxena), Mushtaq Khan (Bacchu's father) and others are fair and let down by the writing.
Bhabiji Ghar Par Hain movie music and other technical aspects:
Vishal Shelke's music is forced. 'Manjogi' doesn't register at all. Vishal Shelke's background score works well for the film.
P K Swain's action is realistic. Arup Adhikary's production design is theatrical but also has cinematic appeal. Nisha Bedi's costumes are appropriate. Sanjay Sankla's editing is functional.
Bhabiji Ghar Par Hain Movie Review Conclusion:
On the whole, BHABIJI GHAR PAR HAIN is a pale shadow of the TV show, offering neither its wit nor its consistent laughs. The overuse of toilet humour and weak writing drag the film down further. At the box office, it will find it tough to pull in viewers.
