7hitmovies Punjabi Movies !exclusive! Page
The premiere was held in a single theatre in Amritsar. No fanfare. Just Jassi, now 31, looking tired and calm. The film was 2 hours of silence, longing, and a single scene where his character sees his childhood home on the other side of the border and just whispers, "Ghar aaja, veere." (Come home, brother.)
And somewhere, a new ticket-seller watched the screen, memorizing every dialogue, waiting for his turn. Because in Pollywood, the legend of the "Seven-Shot Wonder" had just begun.
The scene where Jassi, dressed as a Queen’s Guard, accidentally smacks a real guard and then does the bhangra to distract tourists is still a meme. The film broke records, earning ₹52 crore. It was the highest-grossing Punjabi film of the year. Hit number four.
Jassi ignored them. The climax—where the heroine walks down the aisle only to find his empty wheelchair and a letter saying, "Milan agle janam te" (See you in the next life)—was devastating. Women walked out of cinemas red-eyed. Men sat in their cars for ten minutes before driving home.
He walked off the stage. Behind him, a giant banner read:
That night, at the Plaza Talkies in Bhatinda, the owner placed a single chair in the front row with a plaque: "Reserved for Jassi Shergill. The man who showed us seven wonders."
A highly rated comedy currently making waves among audiences.