Bank Chor (transl. Bank robber) is a 2017 Indian Hindi-language heistblack comedy film directed by Bumpy and produced by Ashish Patil and Aashish Singh under the Yash Raj Films banner.[1] The story centers on three inept criminals—played by Riteish Deshmukh as Champak Chiplunkar, Vivek Oberoi, and Bhuvan Arora—who attempt a bank robbery on an ill-fated day marked by escalating chaos and unintended complications involving police and media.[1] Released theatrically on 16 June 2017, the film features supporting performances by Rhea Chakraborty and Vikram Thapa, with a screenplay by Baljeet Singh Marwah emphasizing slapstick humor and situational comedy amid the heist gone awry.[2] Critically, it garnered lukewarm reception, evidenced by audience ratings averaging 6/10 on IMDb from over 3,000 votes and a mere 11% approval on Rotten Tomatoes based on limited reviews, often critiqued for uneven pacing and formulaic tropes despite its premise of comedic mishaps.[1] Commercially, Bank Chor underperformed, collecting approximately ₹9.85 crore at the box office against modest expectations, with opening weekend earnings of ₹4.36 crore failing to sustain momentum.[3] No major achievements or controversies defined its run, positioning it as a mid-tier Bollywood comedy reliant on star appeal rather than innovation.[4]
Production
Development
Yash Raj Films announced Bank Chor in July 2014 under its youth-focused Y-Films banner as a black comedyheistcaper centered on three inept robbers attempting a bank robbery on an inauspicious day.[5] The screenplay was penned by Baljeet Singh Marwah, who co-developed the story with director Bumpy, emphasizing satirical elements of bungled crime and bureaucratic chaos.[6] This marked Bumpy's directorial debut, selected by YRF for his innovative approach to low-stakes heist narratives infused with humor targeting institutional inefficiencies.[7]Pre-production faced a minor hurdle with the Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC), which objected to the repeated utterance of the title "Bank Chor" in dialogues, deeming it phonetically suggestive of a Hindiexpletive ("behenchod") when spoken rapidly.[8]Producer Ashish Patil clarified that the board's suggestions pertained solely to audio modifications for certain lines, not the title itself, which was retained after minor re-dubs to comply with certification guidelines.[9] The film received a U/A rating on June 13, 2017, without title alterations.[10]YRF allocated a budget of approximately ₹15 crore to the project, aligning with its strategy to produce mid-scale comedies blending thriller tropes with relatable, youthful satire following successes in similar genres.[11] This approach aimed to leverage Y-Films' focus on innovative, low-risk entertainers to attract younger audiences amid competition from big-budget spectacles.[5]
Casting
Riteish Deshmukh was selected for the lead role of Champak Chandrakant Chiplunkar, the inept primary robber, leveraging his proven aptitude for comedic roles in films like the Housefull series, which emphasized physical humor and timing essential to the film's portrayal of bungled criminality.[1][12] His casting aligned with director Bumpy's intent to satirize incompetence through relatable, middle-class everyman characters rather than glamorous anti-heroes.[13]Vivek Oberoi portrayed CBI officer Amjad Khan, providing a foil of rigid authority to the robbers' chaos; Oberoi's prior action-oriented roles, including returns to Yash Raj Films after a 15-year gap, suited the character's no-nonsense demeanor, heightening the satire on bureaucratic overreach.[1]Rhea Chakraborty was cast opposite Deshmukh as Gayatri Ganguly, the female lead involved in the ensuing romantic and chaotic dynamics, marking her first collaboration with him in a "cracker of a role" that added layers to the ensemble's flawed interactions.[14][15]Supporting actors like Sahil Vaid (Jugnu), Bhuvan Arora (Gulab), and Vikram Thapa (Genda) filled the roles of the accomplice robbers, chosen for their ability to embody collective idiocy without overshadowing the leads, reinforcing the film's critique of systemic inefficiencies through portrayals of minor institutional figures such as the bank manager (Ramakant Dayma) and journalist Shashank Thakur (Vikram Gokhale).[16][17] The ensemble approach, eschewing A-list megastars, prioritized balanced dynamics to underscore non-heroic flaws and satirical commentary on incompetence over individual star appeal.[18]
Filming
Principal photography for Bank Chor began in October 2014 in Mumbai, with initial shoots focusing on interior scenes.[19][20] Approximately 60 percent of the film was captured in controlled studio environments, primarily at Mehboob Studio, to facilitate the confined, escalating disorder central to the heistpremise.[21][22]Subsequent outdoor filming occurred in Mumbai locations during December 2014, minimizing exterior work to preserve the narrative's emphasis on internal mishaps and logistical constraints.[19] The production adhered to a tight schedule typical of Y-Films' low-budget model, leveraging studio sets for the titular bank's interior—branded as "The Bank of Indians"—to simulate realistic yet exaggerated amateur errors without extensive location scouting.[23]Director Bumpy prioritized ensemble coordination to capture spontaneous comedic timing, reflecting the script's causal chain of unprepared decisions leading to operational failures, though specific technical innovations like extended takes were not publicly detailed in production notes.[6] The shoot emphasized efficiency, wrapping principal photography ahead of post-production phases that incorporated visual effects for amplified slapstick elements by mid-2016.[24]
Cast
Principal cast
Riteish Deshmukh as Champak Chandrakant Chiplunkar, the inept leader of a trio of amateur bank robbers attempting a heist on an inopportune day.[1]
Vivek Oberoi as CBI Officer Amjad Khan, the aggressive and impulsive law enforcement figure leading the response to the robbery.[1]
Rhea Chakraborty as Gayatri Ganguly, the opportunistic journalist covering the unfolding bank siege from outside.[1]
Supporting cast
Vikram Thapa portrays Genda, one of the amateur robbers whose bungled efforts exemplify personal incompetence within the heist ensemble.[16]Bhuvan Arora plays Gulab, the third robber, whose idiotic mishaps amplify the group's chaotic ineptitude and comedic failures during the botched robbery on June 16, 2017.[16][25] Upendra Limaye appears as Home Minister Dongardive, embodying institutional bungling through decisions that exacerbate the crisis.[16]Vikram Gokhale enacts Shashank Thakur, a journalist whose backstory highlights overlooked systemic flaws contributing to the unfolding disorder.[16] Sahil Vaid's Jugnu adds to the layered incompetence by introducing deceptive elements that confuse authorities and prolong the standoff.[16] Naveen Kaushik as Ashutosh Sharma further illustrates bureaucratic rigidity in handling the hostage situation.[16]
Plot
Synopsis
Three inept amateur robbers—Champak Chandrakant Chiplunkar, Genda, and Gulab—select a Delhi bank for what they intend as a straightforward heist on June 16, driven by Champak's urgent need to fund his father's bypass surgery.[1][2] Their rudimentary plan unravels immediately upon entry, as the bank's unexpected influx of customers and employees, coinciding with heightened security protocols, forces them to improvise by taking hostages to maintain control.[1][25] This escalation stems directly from their failure to scout external factors, transforming a quick grab into a volatile standoff.[26]Police involvement intensifies the crisis when a senior investigator, Amjad Khan, arrives on site, suspecting the robbers of prior offenses and leveraging the situation for personal gain, which introduces negotiation tactics and media scrutiny.[25][27] Internal frictions among the trio, rooted in misaligned motives and poor communication—such as Genda's impulsiveness and Gulab's inexperience—compound the errors, leading to unintended alliances with captives and further procedural blunders that prolong the siege.[1][2] These cause-effect chains, from overlooked timing to reactive decisions under pressure, dictate the narrative's progression toward an increasingly convoluted resolution arc.[28]
Soundtrack
Track listing
The soundtrack for Bank Chor features five original songs composed by multiple artists, including Kailash Kher, Rochak Kohli, Shamir Tandon, and Himesh Reshammiya, with lyrics by various writers such as Kailash Kher, Adheesh Verma, and Arafat Mehmood.[29][30] The album was digitally released by YRF Music on May 16, 2017, prior to the film's theatrical premiere.[30]
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Composition and reception
The soundtrack for Bank Chor features compositions by Rochak Kohli, Kailash Kher, and Shamir Tandon, emphasizing upbeat, quirky tracks with satirical undertones suited to the film's heist comedy premise.[32] Recording sessions aligned with the film's principal photography in 2016, enabling integration of music into promotional teasers.[33] The full album, comprising five tracks totaling 16 minutes, was released digitally by YRF Music on May 24, 2017, shortly before the film's theatrical debut.[32]Promotional singles like "Tashreef" were strategically unveiled in late May 2017 to generate buzz, featuring novel elements such as cup percussion in Riteish Deshmukh's performance video.[34] This approach drew from standard Bollywood practices for comedy soundtracks, prioritizing catchy hooks over narrative depth.Objectively, the soundtrack achieved limited commercial traction, with no documented top chart placements on platforms like iTunesIndia or radio airplay lists in 2017.[35] It garnered no major awards or nominations at events such as the Filmfare or Mirchi Music Awards.[36] YRF did not release specific sales data, consistent with patterns for mid-tier albums that year, where competition from hits like those from Raees and Tubelight dominated metrics.[37] The tracks' formulaic rap and folk-infused styles, while aligning with heist tropes, lacked the innovation to sustain longevity amid diverse genre releases.
Release
Promotion
The official trailer for Bank Chor was unveiled by Yash Raj Films on YouTube on May 8, 2017, featuring the lead actors Riteish Deshmukh and Vivek Oberoi as inept robbers attempting a heist on the "worst day possible," a tagline underscoring the film's comedic premise of cascading failures during the robbery.[24] This digital release aimed to build early anticipation by contrasting the film's bungled caper with polished heist tropes from prior Yash Raj Films productions like the Dhoom series.[38]Promotional efforts extended to the soundtrack, with the release of a novelty track styled as Bollywood's first "CUPS" song on May 25, 2017, tied to a social media challenge where cast members, including Deshmukh, encouraged peers to recreate the dance routine for viral engagement.[34]Riteish Deshmukh leveraged his social media presence to amplify such initiatives, including interactive roasts with co-star Vivek Oberoi that positioned the duo as bumbling "chor" (thieves) and cop, fostering audience participation through humorous, relatable content.[39]A distinctive event on May 30, 2017, involved Deshmukh hosting India's first media roast session in Mumbai, where journalists publicly critiqued the actor to generate buzz via self-deprecating humor aligned with the film's parody of heist inefficiencies and amateur criminals.[40] These tactics, including recreated posters shared on platforms like Twitter, targeted urban youth demographics by emphasizing absurd, low-stakes comedy over high-octane action, though limited by the film's standalone status outside Yash Raj Films' major franchises.[41][42]
Theatrical release
Bank Chor was released theatrically worldwide on June 16, 2017, by Yash Raj Films, with distribution focused primarily on India across approximately 700 screens.[3][43][44]The film received a 'U/A' certification from the Central Board of Film Certification after minor audio dubbing, with no visual cuts required and the title unchanged, resulting in a runtime of 129 minutes.[10][45][3]Its launch clashed with the simultaneous release of Hindi Medium, which restricted screen allocations in major Indian territories and contributed to constrained availability.[2][44]Overseas distribution remained limited, targeting Indian diaspora communities through select screenings rather than broad international rollout.[44][46]
Box office performance
Bank Chor opened to a nett collection of ₹1.4 crore in India on its first day, June 16, 2017, with morning show occupancies ranging from 5% to 10%.[47][48] The film's opening weekend aggregated ₹4.36 crore nett, comprising ₹1.66 crore on Saturday and ₹1.30 crore on Sunday, reflecting limited audience interest amid minimal competition but overshadowed by events like the India-Pakistan Champions Trophy cricket match.[4][49][50]The total India nett gross reached ₹7.11 crore, with the first week accounting for ₹6.89 crore and negligible additions thereafter, indicating poor word-of-mouth and no sustained recovery.[3] Worldwide gross stood at approximately ₹9.85 crore, primarily from domestic markets, as overseas earnings were insignificant.[3] Produced on a budget of ₹15 crore, the film underperformed substantially, earning a flop verdict from trade analysts due to its inability to recover costs despite modest pre-release buzz around its satirical heist premise.[3][49] Average occupancy remained under 10% across its run, exacerbated by genre fatigue in heist comedies and lack of promotional momentum.[47][51]
Reception
Critical response
Bank Chor received predominantly negative reviews from critics, who praised the initial premise of incompetent thieves attempting a heist but lambasted the film's execution, citing a lack of genuine humor, predictable plotting, and tonal inconsistencies. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an 11% approval rating from nine critic reviews, reflecting broad dissatisfaction with its failure to deliver thrills or laughs despite a promising setup.[52]Critics commended Riteish Deshmukh's comedic timing and earnest portrayal of the bumbling lead, which provided occasional sparks amid the mediocrity, as well as the satirical angle on amateurish robbery gone awry. For instance, the Times of India noted Deshmukh's "middle-class Marathiness endears him to the viewer," highlighting his ability to inject relatability into the chaos.[53] However, Vivek Oberoi's efforts were undermined by an overcrowded ensemble that diluted individual performances, with reviewers like those at Firstpost observing that supporting acts, including Sahil Vaid, offered salvaging moments but could not compensate for the script's weaknesses.[54]Dominant criticisms focused on formulaic writing, unresolved subplots, and director Bumpy's inability to sustain momentum, transforming what began as a light comedy into a convoluted thriller without payoff. Hindustan Times awarded 1/5 stars, deeming it a "miserable film" that "fails miserably at being either [comic or thriller]."[55]The Asian Age described it as a "boring comedy, outdated thriller" with unconvincing twists and erratic direction.[56] NDTV labeled it "too low on laughs," evolving into a "bank bore," while Scroll.in faulted it for squandering potential through ineptitude mirroring the on-screen heist.[57][58] These flaws underscored a causal gap between the film's intent to mock incompetence and its delivery of uninspired, derivative content reminiscent of past heist tropes without innovation.[59]
Audience reception
Audience members rated Bank Chor moderately on aggregate platforms, assigning it a 6.0 out of 10 score on IMDb from 3,327 votes as of recent data.[1] This reflects polarization, with some viewers appreciating the slapstick chaos and banter among the inept robbers, particularly those favoring light-hearted heist comedies, while others faulted the uneven pacing and predictable mishaps that undermined entertainment value.[60] On Letterboxd, the film averaged 2.9 out of 5 stars from 813 users, aligning with feedback highlighting occasional relatable satirical nods to bureaucratic inefficiencies but overall dismissing the narrative as formulaic and lacking tension in its comedic execution.[61]Social media and forum discussions from 2017 captured limited buzz, with Twitter users noting sporadic amusement from the film's mockery of red tape and hostage absurdities, yet frequent critiques centered on runtime bloat exceeding two hours and reliance on overused clichés that diluted the heist premise's realism.[62]Reddit threads, including retrospective posts, show niche appreciation among repeat viewers for its unpretentious fun, though consensus leans toward it as a one-time diversion rather than rewatchable fare, with urban demographics citing minor pros in everyday Indian satire offset by contrived plot logic in robbery sequences.[63]Long-term grassroots metrics indicate subdued endurance, evidenced by a 3.3 out of 5 rating on Amazon Prime Video from 45 reviews where the film streams, suggesting low sustained viewership and absence of cult status per platform engagement data.[64] No significant fan communities or viral revivals have emerged on forums, underscoring broad rejection beyond initial theatrical curiosity.[65]
Commercial analysis
Bank Chor, produced by Yash Raj Films on a budget of approximately ₹15 crore, grossed ₹10.17 crore in India, marking it as a commercial flop.[49][66] The film's first-day collection stood at ₹1.40 crore, with a poor Week One total of ₹7.30 crore, reflecting limited audience traction despite YRF's backing.[67][11] This underperformance stemmed from production decisions amplifying risks: entrusting direction to newcomer Bumpy, whose inexperience contributed to scripting flaws described as simplistic and poorly executed, undermining the heist comedy's potential.[68] Riteish Deshmukh's casting, while aligned with comedic roles, failed to generate star-driven pull in a market shifting toward action-oriented spectacles over niche humor by mid-2017.[51]Causal factors included absent viral marketing hooks and no overseas release, restricting revenue streams and word-of-mouth buildup against competitors.[66] YRF's high expectations for genre experimentation clashed with audience preferences, as pure comedies without broad appeal or ensemble draws struggled amid rising costs and selective theatrical viability.[67] Budget inefficiencies were evident, with production costs not offset by ancillary gains, highlighting mismatches in resource allocation for unproven formats. The film's minor satirical edge on ineptitude offered no counterbalancing commercial upside, yielding no awards and underscoring its irrelevance in YRF's portfolio of selective underperformers that prompted internal reevaluations of riskier ventures.[3][69]