Punjabi Movies December 2025 _hot_ Info
How many times can you remake the same rom-com? The fourth entry ships the action to Scotland, where Gippy plays a clumsy cop and Sonam plays an NRI businesswoman. The jokes land 40% of the time—mostly from Binnu Dhillon’s improv. But the plot is a carbon copy of Part 2. Even the songs feel recycled ("Fikar Nai" sounds exactly like "Ferrari" from Part 3). Hardcore fans laughed; critics yawned.
The surprise of the month. This rural sports-comedy about a group of friends building a shoe factory to fund a kabaddi team has zero stars (by traditional standards) but 100% heart. Jagjeet Sandhu proves he can carry a film without a superstar tag. The screenplay is tight, the dialogues are viral-ready ("Jutti nahi, mission hai"), and the climax match is shot like a real sports broadcast. Made on a ₹7 crore budget, it has already grossed ₹48 crore. punjabi movies december 2025
All-Time Blockbuster. The Chal Mera Putt of 2025. Word-of-mouth gold. 5. Gurdas Maan: The Unheard Verses (Documentary) Starring: Gurdas Maan (archival footage), interviews with Diljit, Amrinder Gill Director: Sharan Art Release Date: December 26, 2025 (Limited Release) Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (5/5) How many times can you remake the same rom-com
Blockbuster. A fitting end to the trilogy. Family-friendly despite the action. 2. Kali Jotta 2: Shadows of Truth Starring: Ammy Virk, Sargun Mehta, Tarsem Jassar Director: Rupinder Inderjit Release Date: December 19, 2025 Rating: ⭐⭐⭐½ (3.5/5) But the plot is a carbon copy of Part 2
Super Hit. A thinking person’s Punjabi film, though it runs 20 minutes too long. 3. Jatt & Juliet 4 Starring: Gippy Grewal, Sonam Bajwa, Binnu Dhillon Director: Smeep Kang Release Date: December 25, 2025 (Christmas Day) Rating: ⭐⭐ (2/5)
Review by: Box Office Bureau & Critic’s Desk Date: January 5, 2026
Following the 2024 sleeper hit Kali Jotta , this sequel shifts from social drama to courtroom thriller. Ammy Virk plays a conflicted lawyer defending a woman (Sargun Mehta) accused of killing her abusive husband. The first half is taut and gripping, but the second half falls into moral preaching. Still, Mehta’s monologue in the final act is award-worthy. The music (by Gurmeet Singh) is soulful, though not as catchy as the original’s "Main Nahi Jana."