Jolly LLB
Jolly LLB is a 2013 Indian Hindi-language courtroom comedy-drama film written and directed by Subhash Kapoor, produced by Fox Star Studios, and starring Arshad Warsi as Jagdish Tyagi, a small-time lawyer from Meerut who files a public interest litigation challenging the acquittal in a high-profile hit-and-run case involving the son of an influential figure, pitting him against seasoned advocate Saurabh Joshi played by Boman Irani.[1] The narrative critiques systemic flaws in the Indian legal system through satirical elements, including corruption, media influence, and ethical compromises among legal professionals.[2] Released on 15 March 2013, the film features supporting performances by Amrita Rao as Jolly's love interest and Saurabh Shukla as the presiding judge, whose role earned widespread praise for its nuanced depiction of judicial impartiality under pressure.[3] It achieved commercial success as a box-office hit, collecting ₹12.04 crore in its opening weekend across 875 screens, reflecting strong audience engagement with its accessible take on legal intricacies.[4] Critically, Jolly LLB garnered acclaim for Kapoor's sharp screenplay and direction, securing the National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Hindi and the National Film Award for Best Supporting Actor for Shukla, highlighting its impact on portraying real-world judicial dynamics without overt sensationalism.[5] While inspired by actual cases like high-profile acquittals, the film avoided major controversies at release, though its sequel series later faced scrutiny over depictions of courtroom proceedings.[1] The movie's enduring legacy includes spawning a franchise, with its blend of humor and social commentary influencing subsequent Indian legal dramas.Synopsis
Plot Summary
Jagdish Tyagi, known as Jolly, is a struggling lawyer from Meerut who relocates to Delhi in pursuit of fame and success, idolizing the prominent advocate Tejinder Rastogi.[6][7] Upon arriving, Jolly befriends law student Sandhya, with whom he develops a romantic relationship, and learns of a high-profile 1999 hit-and-run incident involving industrialist Firmachand's BMW, which killed six people including a young boy, yet resulted in the acquittal of Firmachand's son due to Rastogi's defense.[8][9] Motivated by the potential for publicity, Jolly files a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) on behalf of the victims' families, particularly the father of the deceased boy, to reopen the case against Firmachand's son.[10][6] The PIL is initially dismissed by Judge Justice Suman Verma but is later accepted by Judge Sunderlal Tripathi, pitting Jolly against Rastogi, who represents the influential Firmachand.[8] To bolster his arguments, Jolly resorts to fabricating evidence and witnesses, including staging scenarios to implicate the accused more convincingly, while facing personal and professional pressures from Sandhya and the systemic advantages enjoyed by the defense.[8] As the courtroom proceedings escalate, Rastogi counters with aggressive tactics, exposing one of Jolly's fabricated witnesses, which threatens to undermine the case and forces Jolly to confront the ethical compromises he has made.[11][8] In the climactic trial, Jolly admits to the judge that he has fabricated evidence, arguing that such manipulations are commonplace in the system, particularly by the powerful, and urges a verdict based on the undeniable facts of the hit-and-run.[8] Moved by Jolly's candor and the evidence of the accused's guilt, Judge Tripathi convicts Firmachand's son, delivering justice to the victims despite the procedural irregularities on both sides.[7] This resolution marks a turning point for Jolly, who achieves a measure of professional vindication and personal integrity, though at the cost of highlighting the flaws in legal practice.[6][12]Production
Development and Pre-Production
Subhash Kapoor, a former political journalist turned filmmaker, conceived Jolly LLB in the late 2000s, drawing inspiration from real-life high-profile hit-and-run cases that exposed judicial disparities and corruption in India's legal system, particularly the 1999 Sanjeev Nanda BMW incident in Delhi, where a wealthy accused received lenient treatment compared to ordinary litigants.[13] [14] Kapoor incorporated satirical elements reflecting underdog lawyers challenging powerful interests, based on observed irregularities in early 2010s court proceedings and newspaper reports of systemic biases favoring the elite.[15] [16] Kapoor completed the initial script around 2008–2009 but struggled to secure financing amid skepticism from producers wary of its critique of judicial flaws.[17] The project's breakthrough came shortly after the release of his prior film Phas Gaye Re Obama on November 5, 2010, when Fox Star Studios, seeking to expand into original Indian content with lower-risk ventures, agreed to produce it as their inaugural such effort.[18] [19] Pre-production emphasized authenticity through research into Delhi's district courts, including Tis Hazari, to depict procedural realities and embed documented corruption cases into the narrative's satirical framework.[16] The allocated budget was approximately ₹12 crore, reflecting Fox Star's strategy for a modest satire to test market response before larger investments.[20] Challenges arose in planning shoots at actual court premises due to sensitivities over portraying legal malpractices, requiring negotiations for permissions amid initial resistance from judicial stakeholders.[21]Casting and Character Development
Director Subhash Kapoor wrote the lead role of Jagdish "Jolly" Tyagi, a small-time lawyer from Meerut, with Arshad Warsi in mind to leverage his comic timing for the everyman archetype central to the film's satire on underdog legal struggles.[22] Although Shah Rukh Khan was initially considered, Warsi assumed the part after scheduling conflicts arose, aligning his street-smart persona with the character's opportunistic yet principled evolution.[22] Boman Irani portrayed the antagonist Tejinder Rajpal, a shrewd, elite advocate embodying systemic favoritism, with the role drawing direct inspiration from prominent real-life lawyers like Ram Jethmalani to underscore the archetype of influential defense counsel manipulating legal loopholes.[23] Irani's selection emphasized his ability to convey authoritative cunning, as he was drawn to the script's narration highlighting ethical contrasts in the judiciary.[24] Supporting roles included Amrita Rao as Sandhya, Jolly's principled love interest providing moral grounding, and Saurabh Shukla as Judge Sunderlal Tripathi, cast to authentically depict a bemused yet overburdened judicial authority figure reflective of courtroom realities. Character backstories for leads like Jolly were shaped from observations of tier-2 city lawyers' daily hustles, such as filing public interest litigations for visibility amid resource scarcity, to satirize their archetype as ambitious strivers against entrenched power.[23] Pre-filming development focused on aligning these traits without on-set improvisations altering core satirical intents.Filming and Technical Execution
Cinematography for Jolly LLB was handled by Anshuman Mahaley, who focused on framing the film's courtroom sequences to evoke the disorganized intensity of real Indian legal proceedings.[25] Director Subhash Kapoor drew from his firsthand observations in Delhi's Patiala House Court to inform the visual authenticity of these scenes, emphasizing cluttered environments and procedural chaos without relying on extensive on-location shooting in active courts.[16] Sets were constructed to mimic typical district and high court interiors, allowing flexibility in scheduling amid the constraints of Bollywood production timelines, which prioritized studio efficiency over real-time judicial disruptions. This approach facilitated capturing extended arguments and interruptions reflective of protracted Indian trials, where cases often span years due to adjournments and backlogs.[16] In post-production, editor Sandeep Singh Bajeli balanced the satirical humor with dramatic buildup, trimming footage to maintain narrative momentum across the 135-minute runtime while preserving key legal monologues. Critics noted the editing's role in sustaining engagement but suggested refinements could have elevated overall polish, aligning the technical execution with the film's critique of systemic inefficiencies.[26]Themes and Analysis
Satirical Critique of the Indian Judiciary
The film Jolly LLB uses comedic exaggeration to illustrate bribery, evidence fabrication, and favoritism within the Indian judiciary, portraying these as consequences of structural deficiencies like chronic understaffing and remuneration shortfalls that erode ethical incentives. Judicial officers and court personnel, often receiving salaries insufficient to deter graft—such as district judges earning around ₹27,000 monthly in 2013 amid rising living costs—face pressures that facilitate side payments for favorable rulings or adjournments.[27] This depiction aligns with analyses linking low pay scales to heightened corruption vulnerability, where under-resourced staff prioritize expediency over integrity.[28] Compounding these incentives, the judiciary's massive backlog—exceeding 30 million cases in 2013, with 2.64 crore in district courts alone—creates a fertile ground for manipulation, as prolonged delays reward those able to afford bribes for priority handling or suppression of evidence.[29] The narrative satirizes how such overloads enable procedural gaming, where adjournments and technicalities become tools for the affluent to outlast opponents, reflecting causal chains from resource scarcity to outcome distortion rather than mere procedural errors.[30] Protagonist Jolly's resourceful ploys, including courtroom theatrics to unmask perjury and influence networks, expose the exploitation of evidentiary and jurisdictional gaps by elite defendants, echoing patterns in high-profile scandals where procedural laxity shielded powerful interests from scrutiny.[31] This highlights institutional inertia's role in perpetuating inequality, yet the satire pivots to individual agency: Jolly's triumphs stem from personal resolve against systemic entropy, rejecting narratives that absolve actors through appeals to overburdened structures and instead affirming accountability as a counter to entrenched decay.[21]Accuracy and Realism in Legal Portrayal
The film Jolly LLB depicts procedural elements grounded in observed flaws of the Indian lower judiciary, such as lawyers employing subterfuge to influence witnesses and skirt ethical boundaries, which echoes documented misconduct in district courts where advocates occasionally coach testimony or withhold material facts to favor clients.[32] Such practices contravene Bar Council of India rules under the Advocates Act, 1961, which mandate fidelity to client interests without suppressing evidence or abetting perjury, yet disciplinary complaints reveal persistent violations including undue witness preparation.[33] [34] However, the narrative accelerates case progression through contrived courtroom confrontations and swift evidentiary turns, diverging markedly from empirical realities where trials endure prolonged delays. Criminal cases in Indian district courts typically require 3–10 years for resolution, hampered by over 50 million pending matters nationwide and routine adjournments averaging nine weeks per instance.[35] [36] [37] Civil suits fare similarly, often extending 5–15 years before judgment due to backlog and procedural bottlenecks, contrasting the film's compressed timeline designed for dramatic satire rather than procedural fidelity.[38] Rather than idealizing equitable verdicts, Jolly LLB illustrates outcomes hinging on litigant resources, portraying affluent defendants leveraging elite counsel to evade accountability—a causal dynamic supported by disparities in legal access where wealthier parties secure better advocacy and procedural advantages.[39] Empirical analyses of judicial decisions reveal subtle biases tied to defendant traits like shared identity, amplifying inequalities when compounded by economic factors influencing representation quality.[40] This eschews Bollywood tropes of heroic underdogs triumphing via moral rectitude, instead grounding resolution in pragmatic maneuvering amid systemic asymmetries verifiable through court data patterns.[41]Social Commentary on Corruption and Inequality
The film Jolly LLB highlights class-based barriers to justice by contrasting the protagonist Jagdish "Jolly" Tyagi, a low-income lawyer from a modest background who resorts to petty hustles to secure clients, with elite advocates backed by affluent industrialists who leverage financial clout to sway outcomes. This depiction underscores how economic disparities limit access to competent representation, as underclass litigants often face prolonged delays and unfavorable rulings due to inability to match opponents' resources. In reality, India's legal profession exhibits acute income inequality, with top senior advocates charging ₹10-15 lakh per Supreme Court appearance, while the vast majority of junior or small-town lawyers earn under ₹50,000 monthly, effectively pricing out the poor from effective advocacy.[42][43] Central to the narrative is a scathing portrayal of cronyism linking business tycoons and corrupt officials, where the wealthy antagonist bribes court staff and fabricates evidence to evade accountability for a hit-and-run incident, symbolizing broader elite impunity. This resonates with contemporaneous events like the 2G spectrum scam, exposed in 2010, where telecom licenses were allegedly allotted at undervalued prices through political favoritism, resulting in an estimated ₹1.76 lakh crore revenue loss and fueling nationwide protests against institutional graft. The scandal eroded public faith in oversight bodies, including the judiciary, as delays in prosecutions and perceived leniency toward influential figures amplified distrust, with surveys from the early 2010s revealing over 80% of Indians viewing corruption as rampant across public sectors, including courts.[44][45][46] Through Jolly's improbable courtroom triumph via resourceful improvisation—uncovering tampered evidence without elite networks—the film advocates self-reliant agency as a counter to entrenched inequality, portraying systemic egalitarianism as illusory and emphasizing personal grit over perpetual grievance. This hustler ethos critiques reliance on state-driven equity, which has faltered amid persistent disparities, as evidenced by litigation success rates favoring resource-rich parties in civil disputes, where data from the early 2010s show pro se or low-fee litigants prevailing in under 20% of high-stakes cases against corporate entities.[47][48]Soundtrack
Composition and Background Score
The songs for Jolly LLB were composed by Krsna Solo, marking a notable early Bollywood assignment for the composer following his work on regional projects. Solo's arrangements incorporated traditional Indian instruments such as the harmonium and flute, blending folk influences with urban rhythms to mirror the film's portrayal of Delhi's bustling legal undercurrents.[49][50] The background score was composed by Sanjoy Chowdhury, an established Indian film composer whose contributions focused on providing subtle underscoring for the dialogue-intensive courtroom sequences. Chowdhury's work emphasized restraint to maintain narrative clarity amid the satirical legal confrontations, avoiding dense orchestration that could compete with the actors' delivery.[51][52]Track Listing and Notable Songs
The soundtrack of Jolly LLB comprises eight tracks composed by Krsna Solo, with lyrics primarily by Vayu and Subhash Kapoor, released on February 22, 2013, under T-Series.[53][54]| No. | Title | Singer(s) | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jhooth Boliya | Kamal Khan | 4:07 |
| 2 | Daru Peeke Nachna | Mika Singh, Shreya Ghoshal | 4:17 |
| 3 | Ajnabi | Mohit Chauhan, Shreya Ghoshal | 3:54 |
| 4 | Hans Ki Chaal | Kailash Kher | 4:22 |
| 5 | L Lag Gaye | Bappi Lahiri | 4:25 |
| 6 | Jhooth Boliya (Remix) | Kamal Khan, Pritesh Mehta | 3:45 |
| 7 | [Instrumental Track] | Krsna Solo | Varies |
| 8 | [Additional Score] | Krsna Solo | Varies |
Release and Commercial Performance
Distribution and Premiere
The film was theatrically released in India on 15 March 2013, distributed by Fox Star Studios.[1] International distribution targeted regions with significant Indian diaspora populations, with early screenings commencing on 14 March 2013 in markets including Kuwait, Bahrain, and New Zealand.[58] This approach facilitated a phased market entry, prioritizing domestic audiences before broader overseas expansion through limited theatrical runs.[59] Following its commercial debut, Jolly LLB was selected for screening at the 16th Shanghai International Film Festival on 15 June 2013, marking an international festival appearance that extended its visibility beyond initial theatrical circuits.[58][60] Promotional strategies emphasized the film's legal thriller elements and satirical take on corruption, utilizing teaser trailers and posters to build anticipation around the central courtroom conflict.[1] Overseas efforts focused on diaspora-centric venues, such as multiplexes in the Middle East, to leverage cultural familiarity and word-of-mouth among expatriate communities.[61]Box Office Results
_Jolly LLB, produced on a budget of approximately ₹12 crore, achieved a domestic nett collection of ₹32.71 crore in India.[62][63] This resulted in an India gross of ₹45.43 crore, with overseas earnings adding ₹3.27 crore for a worldwide total of ₹48.7 crore.[62] The film's return on investment exceeded 170% based on domestic nett figures, classifying it as a clear commercial hit despite its modest scale.[4] The film opened modestly with a first-weekend nett of around ₹12.35 crore, including ₹3.05 crore on its debut Friday, ₹4.35 crore on Saturday, and ₹4.95 crore on Sunday.[63] Subsequent weeks saw steady growth, driven by positive word-of-mouth that boosted occupancy and footfalls, enabling it to sustain performance amid limited competition from mid-budget releases like Saheb Biwi Gangster Returns.[64] In contrast to contemporaries such as Murder 3, which earned ₹20.86 crore nett from a stronger initial push but faded quickly, Jolly LLB's narrative appeal and satirical elements fostered longer theatrical legs, contributing to its sleeper-hit status.[65] Trade reports highlighted this surge in the second week as evidence of audience-driven momentum rather than promotional hype.[62]Reception
Critical Reviews
Critics generally praised Jolly LLB for its satirical take on the Indian judiciary, highlighting Arshad Warsi's energetic portrayal of the underdog lawyer Jagdish Tyagi, whose street-smart antics and moral evolution drive the narrative.[6][66] The film's script was commended for its biting commentary on corruption and access to justice, with Taran Adarsh of Bollywood Hungama noting its "distinctive entertainer with a heart" that balances comedy and courtroom drama effectively.[6] On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 71% approval rating from seven reviews, reflecting approval for its honest depiction of legal inequities without descending into outright cynicism.[2] However, detractors pointed to pacing issues and formulaic elements, particularly in the first half, which relies on repetitive comedic tropes before tightening in the trial sequences.[7] The Times of India review awarded it 3.5 out of 5 stars but critiqued the underdeveloped subplots involving supporting characters, arguing they dilute the central conflict's intensity.[7] Raja Sen of Rediff.com described the film as "too predictable to be fun," faulting its preachiness and overt sincerity that overshadow subtler humor.[67] Some reviews questioned the film's simplification of legal ethics, suggesting it prioritizes emotional appeals over rigorous procedural realism, potentially misleading viewers on the complexities of judicial impartiality.[68] The Hindu's critique emphasized that while the story delivers "emotional, not legal" satisfaction through its underdog triumph, this approach glosses over systemic barriers in actual Indian courts, rendering the satire more inspirational than analytically deep.[68] Wogma rated it positively for intent and performances but noted a lack of crispness in execution, leading to uneven engagement with broader ethical dilemmas.[69]Audience and Cultural Impact
The film garnered strong audience approval, achieving an IMDb rating of 7.5/10 from over 24,000 user votes, indicating broad resonance particularly among urban and middle-class viewers who identified with its portrayal of underdog struggles against entrenched legal corruption.[1] Many spectators praised its accessible humor and critique of systemic inefficiencies, viewing it as a relatable satire on everyday encounters with bureaucratic hurdles in India's judiciary, though some noted inconsistencies in pacing.[66] Culturally, Jolly LLB permeated Indian popular discourse through the enduring meme-ability of its dialogues and the titular character's archetype of resourceful advocacy, often invoked to denote shrewd legal maneuvering in media and online banter. Iconic lines, such as those questioning institutional opacity, have been repurposed in social commentary; for example, industrialist Anand Mahindra referenced a scene in 2021 to debunk a misattributed quote, amplifying the film's colloquial footprint.[70] Public entities like Delhi Police adapted its memes in 2020 to urge compliance with COVID-19 mask protocols, demonstrating the film's integration into everyday civic messaging.[71] These elements fostered informal conversations on judicial accessibility, with media outlets citing the movie's narrative as a mirror to public disillusionment, though quantifiable shifts in reform advocacy, such as via opinion polls, remain undocumented in contemporaneous reports.[72]Controversies
Depiction of Judicial Institutions
The film Jolly LLB (2013) satirizes the Indian judicial system by depicting lower courts as rife with corruption, where lawyers routinely accept bribes, fabricate evidence, and exploit procedural loopholes to favor influential clients, while underdog protagonists navigate a hierarchy skewed toward the powerful. Judges are shown as occasionally complicit or indifferent to systemic graft, with courtroom proceedings marred by adjournments and favoritism, exemplified in a central plot involving a hit-and-run case where a wealthy influencer's son evades accountability through legal manipulation. This portrayal draws loose inspiration from real-life incidents, such as high-profile hit-and-run cases where affluent perpetrators secured lenient outcomes via influence.[73] Legal professionals mounted significant opposition, with groups of practicing lawyers filing a public interest litigation (PIL) in the Delhi High Court on March 6, 2013, seeking to halt the film's release on grounds that its scenes and dialogues undermined the dignity of courts and defamed lawyers, particularly those from institutions like Meerut University. Petitioners argued the trailer contained contemptuous content, such as portrayals of judges reacting angrily to procedural irregularities, stereotyping the profession as inherently unethical. The court dismissed the plea, refusing to stay the release and emphasizing that artistic expression does not automatically constitute contempt without proven malice. Similar protests occurred outside theaters, with lawyers decrying the film's reinforcement of negative stereotypes amid broader concerns over media depictions eroding public trust in the judiciary.[74][75][76] Critics of the backlash contended that the satire mirrors verifiable institutional shortcomings rather than fabricating scandals, pointing to empirical evidence of delays and graft as causal factors in public disillusionment. For instance, National Judicial Data Grid statistics indicate an average disposal time of approximately 4.91 years for civil suits in district courts, with appeals often extending resolution to 15 years or more in higher courts due to chronic understaffing and procedural abuses. On corruption, the Indian government reported receiving 1,631 complaints of judicial graft between 2017 and 2021, underscoring persistent allegations of misconduct that erode efficacy without implicating all practitioners. Defenders, including filmmakers and some judicial observers, praised the film for exposing normalized systemic inefficiencies—such as influence peddling in case allotments and bribery in evidence handling—as collective failures amenable to reform, rather than individual moral lapses, thereby prompting discourse on accountability absent from sanitized institutional narratives.[77][38][78][30]Legal Challenges and Public Backlash
In February 2017, Bata India Limited initiated a criminal defamation suit against the producers, director, and actors of Jolly LLB 2, including Akshay Kumar, over a trailer dialogue perceived as derogatory toward the brand, demanding INR 3 crore in damages for alleged commercial disparagement.[79][80] The company concurrently alleged trademark infringement, prompting a pre-release agreement to remove the specific "Bata" reference from the film to avert further escalation.[81] A metropolitan magistrate court issued summons to the defendants, but the Bombay High Court subsequently exempted Kumar from mandatory personal attendance at hearings, citing procedural fairness while allowing the case to proceed on merits.[82] This resolution underscored judicial deference to artistic intent amid commercial claims, with no evidence of sustained disruption to the film's release or broader censure. The release of Jolly LLB 3 in September 2025 provoked multiple public interest litigations (PILs) from lawyers alleging judicial mockery through exaggerated courtroom scenes and dialogues, contending that such satire undermines institutional authority and public faith in the judiciary.[83][84] On September 17, 2025, the Bombay High Court dismissed a PIL seeking to stall the film's distribution, with Chief Justice Devendra Kumar Upadhyaya and Justice Arif Doctor observing that judges encounter mockery routinely from their induction and remain unaffected, rejecting arguments of eroded public trust as unsubstantiated.[85][86] Two days later, on September 19, the Karnataka High Court similarly rejected a petitioner's demand to purge promotional materials, imposing a INR 50,000 cost for frivolous invocation of judicial process and characterizing the content as comedic rather than defamatory.[87] These dismissals highlighted a pattern where courts prioritized expressive freedoms under Article 19(1)(a) of the Indian Constitution over speculative harms to institutional prestige. Public reactions revealed a schism, with conservative elements in the legal community decrying the series' irreverence as a threat to judicial solemnity and deterrence of elite malfeasance, while proponents argued it exposed systemic lapses in access to justice, fostering overdue scrutiny without verifiable erosion of trust—evidenced by the franchises' commercial viability and lack of empirical data linking portrayals to declining litigant confidence.[88] Such sensitivities, often amplified by professional guilds, stem from entrenched institutional self-preservation instincts amid India's overburdened courts, yet judicial outcomes consistently favored contextual satire over preemptive censorship, affirming no causal nexus between fictional critique and tangible institutional decay.[89]Awards and Recognition
Nominations and Wins
At the 61st National Film Awards, presented in 2014 for films released in 2013, Jolly LLB won the award for Best Feature Film in Hindi, recognizing its satirical take on the legal system. Saurabh Shukla received the Best Supporting Actor award for his role as Justice S. Tripathi, praised for embodying judicial integrity amid corruption.[90][91][92] The film secured the Filmfare Critics Award for Best Film at the 59th Filmfare Awards in 2014, highlighting its critical acclaim for narrative innovation. It was nominated in the Best Film category and Arshad Warsi received a nomination for Best Performance in a Comic Role for his lead portrayal of Jagdish Tyagi.[93] Saurabh Shukla also won the Screen Award for Best Supporting Actor in 2014, further affirming the strength of the film's judicial satire through individual performances. Arshad Warsi earned the IIFA Award for Performance in a Comic Role, underscoring the comedic elements central to the screenplay.[94]| Award Ceremony | Year | Category | Recipient | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Film Awards (61st) | 2014 | Best Feature Film in Hindi | Jolly LLB | Won[90] |
| National Film Awards (61st) | 2014 | Best Supporting Actor | Saurabh Shukla | Won[91] |
| Filmfare Awards (59th) | 2014 | Critics Award for Best Film | Jolly LLB | Won[93] |
| Filmfare Awards (59th) | 2014 | Best Film | Jolly LLB | Nominated[93] |
| Filmfare Awards (59th) | 2014 | Best Performance in a Comic Role | Arshad Warsi | Nominated[94] |
| Screen Awards | 2014 | Best Supporting Actor | Saurabh Shukla | Won[93] |
| IIFA Awards | 2014 | Performance in a Comic Role | Arshad Warsi | Won[94] |