Saunkan Saunkanay 2
- 2025
- 2h 22min
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA man with two quarreling wives faces chaos when his mother brings home an Italian woman as a potential third wife. His current wives, who are sisters, unite against this new threat while vi... Tout lireA man with two quarreling wives faces chaos when his mother brings home an Italian woman as a potential third wife. His current wives, who are sisters, unite against this new threat while village onlookers watch the drama unfold.A man with two quarreling wives faces chaos when his mother brings home an Italian woman as a potential third wife. His current wives, who are sisters, unite against this new threat while village onlookers watch the drama unfold.
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"Saunkan Saunkne 2" proves that not every sequel needs to exist - and in this case, it probably shouldn't have. The first film had its charm, some laughs, and decent chemistry. The second? It's like the writers took leftover jokes from WhatsApp forwards and called it a day.
The plot tries to recreate the chaos of domestic rivalry and "funny" marital drama, but ends up feeling like an overcooked soap opera with a laugh track that forgot to show up. It's a rinse-and-repeat formula: loud arguments, forced romance, and jokes that land with the grace of a tractor falling down the stairs.
Ammy Virk looks like he's running purely on muscle memory. His expressions rarely change, as if even he knows he's trapped in a loop of bad writing. Sargun Mehta and Nimrat Khaira, both talented in their own right, are wasted in roles that revolve around screaming, pouting, and throwing passive-aggressive tantrums like teenagers fighting over a TikTok ring light.
The humor, which is supposed to be the film's lifeline, is painfully outdated. Expect a flood of tired jokes about wives fighting, nosey aunties, and men acting like helpless buffoons caught between two "crazy" women. It's 2025, and we're still being served comedy that feels like it was written in 2004.
To top it off, the film drags. Scenes linger long after the joke has died, resurrected, and died again. The emotional moments are laughably forced, and the ending feels like even the director gave up and just wanted to go home.
Final verdict: Saunkan Saunkne 2 is the kind of sequel that makes you reconsider watching the original in the first place. Skip it, unless you enjoy recycled drama, overacting, and plotlines that go absolutely nowhere.
The plot tries to recreate the chaos of domestic rivalry and "funny" marital drama, but ends up feeling like an overcooked soap opera with a laugh track that forgot to show up. It's a rinse-and-repeat formula: loud arguments, forced romance, and jokes that land with the grace of a tractor falling down the stairs.
Ammy Virk looks like he's running purely on muscle memory. His expressions rarely change, as if even he knows he's trapped in a loop of bad writing. Sargun Mehta and Nimrat Khaira, both talented in their own right, are wasted in roles that revolve around screaming, pouting, and throwing passive-aggressive tantrums like teenagers fighting over a TikTok ring light.
The humor, which is supposed to be the film's lifeline, is painfully outdated. Expect a flood of tired jokes about wives fighting, nosey aunties, and men acting like helpless buffoons caught between two "crazy" women. It's 2025, and we're still being served comedy that feels like it was written in 2004.
To top it off, the film drags. Scenes linger long after the joke has died, resurrected, and died again. The emotional moments are laughably forced, and the ending feels like even the director gave up and just wanted to go home.
Final verdict: Saunkan Saunkne 2 is the kind of sequel that makes you reconsider watching the original in the first place. Skip it, unless you enjoy recycled drama, overacting, and plotlines that go absolutely nowhere.
I have never written a review before , but after watching this particular movie with my family, I felt compelled to share our experience. Unfortunately, it was one of the most underwhelming movie outings we've had in a long time - and that's putting it mildly.
We were genuinely excited to watch this film. The trailer looked promising, and the promotions had built up a lot of expectations. Wanting to make it a special family day, we planned everything in advance - took a leave from work, and even traveled quite a distance just to catch it at a good theatre. In total, we spent quite a bit, not just in terms of money, but also time and effort. Never even think about making a third part of this movie.
We were genuinely excited to watch this film. The trailer looked promising, and the promotions had built up a lot of expectations. Wanting to make it a special family day, we planned everything in advance - took a leave from work, and even traveled quite a distance just to catch it at a good theatre. In total, we spent quite a bit, not just in terms of money, but also time and effort. Never even think about making a third part of this movie.
THIS IS MY FIRST TIME WRITING A MOVIE REVIEW CAUSE MY EXPERIENCE WAS SOO BAD
"Saunkan Saunkne 2" proves that not every sequel needs to exist - and in this case, it probably shouldn't have. The first film had its charm, some laughs, and decent chemistry. The second? It's like the writers took leftover jokes from WhatsApp forwards and called it a day.
The plot tries to recreate the chaos of domestic rivalry and "funny" marital drama, but ends up feeling like an overcooked soap opera with a laugh track that forgot to show up. It's a rinse-and-repeat formula: loud arguments, forced romance, and jokes that land with the grace of a tractor falling down the stairs.
Ammy Virk looks like he's running purely on muscle memory. His expressions rarely change, as if even he knows he's trapped in a loop of bad writing. Sargun Mehta and Nimrat Khaira, both talented in their own right, are wasted in roles that revolve around screaming, pouting, and throwing passive-aggressive tantrums like teenagers fighting over a TikTok ring light.
The humor, which is supposed to be the film's lifeline, is painfully outdated. Expect a flood of tired jokes about wives fighting, nosey aunties, and men acting like helpless buffoons caught between two "crazy" women. It's 2025, and we're still being served comedy that feels like it was written in 2004.
To top it off, the film drags. Scenes linger long after the joke has died, resurrected, and died again. The emotional moments are laughably forced, and the ending feels like even the director gave up and just wanted to go home.
Final verdict: Saunkan Saunkne 2 is the kind of sequel that makes you reconsider watching the original in the first place. Skip it, unless you enjoy recycled drama, overacting, and plotlines that go absolutely nowhere.
P. S. If they make a part 3, we riot.
"Saunkan Saunkne 2" proves that not every sequel needs to exist - and in this case, it probably shouldn't have. The first film had its charm, some laughs, and decent chemistry. The second? It's like the writers took leftover jokes from WhatsApp forwards and called it a day.
The plot tries to recreate the chaos of domestic rivalry and "funny" marital drama, but ends up feeling like an overcooked soap opera with a laugh track that forgot to show up. It's a rinse-and-repeat formula: loud arguments, forced romance, and jokes that land with the grace of a tractor falling down the stairs.
Ammy Virk looks like he's running purely on muscle memory. His expressions rarely change, as if even he knows he's trapped in a loop of bad writing. Sargun Mehta and Nimrat Khaira, both talented in their own right, are wasted in roles that revolve around screaming, pouting, and throwing passive-aggressive tantrums like teenagers fighting over a TikTok ring light.
The humor, which is supposed to be the film's lifeline, is painfully outdated. Expect a flood of tired jokes about wives fighting, nosey aunties, and men acting like helpless buffoons caught between two "crazy" women. It's 2025, and we're still being served comedy that feels like it was written in 2004.
To top it off, the film drags. Scenes linger long after the joke has died, resurrected, and died again. The emotional moments are laughably forced, and the ending feels like even the director gave up and just wanted to go home.
Final verdict: Saunkan Saunkne 2 is the kind of sequel that makes you reconsider watching the original in the first place. Skip it, unless you enjoy recycled drama, overacting, and plotlines that go absolutely nowhere.
P. S. If they make a part 3, we riot.
Few dialogues and scenes are funny, otherwise fake comedy movie e.g. Panchayat scenes- panchayat is a group of elected members and is a respectable unit in the villages who resolves the issues in the villages but in the movie it's opposite, fake wedding scenes - they are are showing kind of destination wedding in the village, kissing scene is forcefully added to make movie funny, there was no need of that, flash back scenes showing mother's past..totally fake...man killed the girl's father and she is looking at him, impressed with his bravery and wants to marry that person...what bravery she saw and who wants to marry a man who killed the father ? Very unrealistic and fake..and many more fake scenes present in the movie ...I will say wastage of time and money..writing this review so the whole team including - writer/director/producer/actor/actresses should understand people are not stupid, that what ever they are presenting is not always good or acceptable ..in future they should think before present anything in the front of people....there are many good quality Punjabi comedy movies present in the Punjabi film industry.
What an absolute disaster of a film. Saunkan Saunkne 2 is not just bad - it's painfully bad. Cringe content from start to finish, every scene packed with unbearable loud shouting, over-the-top drama, and full of overacting.
Two and a half hours felt like a lifetime. Not a single redeeming moment. It's not funny, it's not emotional, and it's definitely not entertaining. The only emotion you'll feel is regret for buying the ticket.
This isn't cinema - it's punishment. If this is what Punjabi comedy is turning into, we're in big trouble.
Verdict: Avoid at all costs. Worst movie I've ever watched in a theatre.
Two and a half hours felt like a lifetime. Not a single redeeming moment. It's not funny, it's not emotional, and it's definitely not entertaining. The only emotion you'll feel is regret for buying the ticket.
This isn't cinema - it's punishment. If this is what Punjabi comedy is turning into, we're in big trouble.
Verdict: Avoid at all costs. Worst movie I've ever watched in a theatre.
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Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut mondial
- 641 178 $US
- Durée2 heures 22 minutes
- Couleur
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