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HomeEntertainmentHisaab Barabar review: R. Madhavan, Neil Nitin Mukesh in a mathematics class you wish you had bunked

Hisaab Barabar review: R. Madhavan, Neil Nitin Mukesh in a mathematics class you wish you had bunked

Hisaab Barabar review: Director Ashwni Dhir goes to great lengths to make the anti-corruption message painfully obvious. Hisaab Barabar practically hammers the social commentary in your head, like a henchman forcefully opening your eyelids, coercing you to look at the giant hoarding-sized social message in case you missed it the first hundred times it was spelled out.

January 24, 2025 / 13:45 IST
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Hisaab Barabar review

In Hisaab Barabar, Neil Nitin Mukesh plays a flamboyantly dressed, overly quirky politician Mickey Mehta who says things like “Common man is a donkey”. R. Madhavan is Radhe Mohan Sharma, former CA aspirant-turned-ticket collector who firmly sticks to his principles and rarely defaults on fine collection duty. He teaches students in what seems like a makeshift classroom at the railway station. Radhe Mohan seems to be obsessed with tallying balance sheets. He simply cannot rest unless LHS=RHS, and everything adds up.

Hisaab Barabar Movie: Plot

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His entire personality as a single father revolves around cross-verifying numbers. Unsurprisingly, Radhe Mohan lands up in the bank when he spots a discrepancy of Rs 27.50. In an unlikely turn of events, he uncovers a large-scale bank fraud involving Micky Mohan. Where the plot goes next is anyone’s guess. A burgundy haired Kirti Kulhari plays Inspector Poonam Joshi, who travels by train on the same route as Radhe Mohan.

The two begin an unlikely romance, as Radhe Mohan investigates the bank fraud. Some 20,000 times the phrase ‘hisaab baraabar’ is uttered by the lead, supporting cast, and extras, almost as a force-fit brand plugin. Heck even the background score is a VO artist whispering ‘hisaab barabar’ on loop. We get it, the aim here is to expose the large-scale corruption, the unholy nexus between banking sector and politicians, while also championing the spirit of a common man who stands for the right.