The younger son, played by Parvin Dabas, is the moral compass, yet passive. He tries to handle things legally before realizing that in this jungle, the law is often toothless.
Most Bollywood films would solve this with a dramatic court scene where the hero delivers a fiery speech. Khosla Ka Ghosla says: "That doesn't work." Khosla Ka Ghosla-
Left with no options, the mild-mannered Kamal Khosla takes a backseat, and his cynical, "adjustment"-hating younger son, Cherish (Ranvir Shorey), takes over. His plan? Don't fight the system with law. Fight the scammer with a bigger scam. The younger son, played by Parvin Dabas, is
The story is deceptively simple. Kamal Khosla (Anupam Kher) is a retired middle-class government employee in Delhi. He has a life savings of Rs. 25 lakh and a dream: to buy a plot of land in the suburbs (Ghaziabad, specifically Indirapuram) to build his family’s "ghosla" (nest). Khosla Ka Ghosla says: "That doesn't work
It is the ultimate wish-fulfillment for the common man: outsmarting the bully not with violence, but with psychological warfare and middle-class ingenuity.
When Khosla tries to fight legally, he loses time, money, and hair. The true solution comes from an unconventional source: his wayward, unemployed son, Cherry (Ranvir Shorey). Cherry introduces the family to the "local" method—bribing goons, faking documents, and staging an elaborate con. The film delivers a cynical, yet hilarious, thesis: To beat a corrupt system, you must become a smarter con artist.