Khosla Ka Ghosla
Ranvir Shorey’s Chicken (Cherry) is the film’s dark horse. He’s lazy, smokes weed, and fights with his brother. But when the family is being destroyed, he becomes the mastermind. His transformation from a "good-for-nothing" son to the family’s unlikely savior is the film’s emotional core.
What follows is not a violent revenge drama, but a clever, slow-burn plan orchestrated by Khosla’s street-smart, unemployed younger son, Cherry (Ranvir Shorey). The family decides to fight fire with fire—not with guns, but with deceit, bureaucracy, and an unforgettable fake property dealer named . khosla ka ghosla
Why should you watch it?
In the mid-2000s, while Bollywood was busy filming sweeping romances in the Swiss Alps, a small, unassuming film quietly slipped into theaters and changed the narrative of Indian cinema forever. , directed by Dibakar Banerjee and written by Jaideep Sahni, didn't have a superstar cast or a massive budget. Instead, it had something far more potent: an authentic, hilarious, and deeply relatable soul. Ranvir Shorey’s Chicken (Cherry) is the film’s dark