To cut a long story short, there is rivalry between two families ending is Raju's (Soham) father (Shantilal), killing Mishti's (Srabanti) uncle (Bharat Kaul). Dipankar De and his two sons, essayed by Kaushik and Surajit, vow to find and wipe out any trace of the killer's family, that is his son. Fate brings Raju to Mishti' place and the twist comes once his identity is revealed. The catch is that Mishti's family are worshippers of Narayan. So there cannot be any bloodshed at home. But choukath perolei the dakater bongsho gets back to drawing blood. Hilarious situations keep happening as Raju tries his best not to leave Mishti's house and her family reaches its wit's end to pull him out of the house.
Dipankar stuns the audience yet again with the conviction in which he plays the head of the family. Kaushik impatience and the eagerness to avenge his uncle's death come through in his dialogue delivery, while Surajit does his bit too. But there's another character, an animated one at that, that steals the show. It's Kanchan Mullick's voice as an animated cycle. Much like Basanti's Dhanno, this cycle too emerges at crucial junctures in the story and saves the hero's life.
A must mention of course, is the music that has composers Jeet Gannguli and Samidh behind it. With "E moner cell phone charger keno jote na", "E poth jodi na sesh hoye" and "Coca Cola", the duo has steadily climbed the charts. And just like you save the very best for the last, the very romantic, "Chokhe chokhe dekha" track appears when the end credits start rolling.
So, folks, manage some time out in between those pandal-hopping sessions and indulge in some "Phande Poriya..." moments just to pep up the already soaring Puja spirit.