Ayushmann's 'Pati Patni Aur Woh Do' Opens in Cinemas May 15
Ayushmann Khurrana returns with family comedy Pati Patni Aur Woh Do, releasing in cinemas on May 15 after Dream Girl 2's ₹100 cr run.
MUMBAI — Ayushmann Khurrana is returning to theatres on May 15 with Pati Patni Aur Woh Do, a family comedy that the actor and his producers are pitching as one of the season's big-screen crowd-pleasers — and early trade interest suggests the positioning may not be overreach.
The film arrives at a commercially significant moment for Khurrana. His last two releases, Dream Girl 2 (2023) and the horror-comedy Thama (2025), both crossed the ₹100 crore mark at the domestic box office, cementing his standing as one of Hindi cinema's most reliable commercial draws in the mid-budget space. Pati Patni Aur Woh Do is expected to continue that trajectory, with a release timed for a holiday-adjacent weekend.
The title — a play on the 1978 Sanjeev Kumar comedy Pati Patni Aur Woh and its 2019 remake — signals a film rooted in domestic comedy and marital chaos, a genre that Khurrana has navigated with consistent success. Specific plot details have not been officially disclosed, but the production has described it as a multi-generational family entertainer built around relationship dynamics and comedic escalation.
"Content is king, and Pati Patni Aur Woh Do is exactly the kind of film that brings families together in a theatre," Khurrana said at a recent promotional event. "There's chaos, there's warmth, and there's a lot of laughter — but at its core it's a film about people everyone in the audience will recognise."
The statement reflects a creative philosophy that has defined much of Khurrana's career since his breakout in Vicky Donor (2012). Over more than a decade, he has built a filmography centred on relatable, often satirical portrayals of middle-class Indian life — spanning small-town romance, disability, sexual identity, and social aspiration — in films including Dum Laga Ke Haisha, Shubh Mangal Saavdhan, Andhadhun, Bala, and Chandigarh Kare Aashiqui. The formula of using comedy as a vehicle for social observation has earned him both critical recognition and durable audience loyalty.
With Pati Patni Aur Woh Do, the emphasis appears to shift toward pure entertainment, prioritising theatrical experience over message-driven storytelling — a recalibration that trade analysts have noted is increasingly common among actors managing both critical credibility and box office expectations.
Full cast and crew details, including the director's credit, had not been officially confirmed by the production at the time of publication. A trailer release is anticipated in the days ahead of the May 15 opening.
The film will compete in a theatrical window that has seen renewed audience appetite for Hindi comedy since the post-pandemic recovery of the domestic box office. Whether Pati Patni Aur Woh Do can sustain Khurrana's ₹100 crore momentum will be closely watched by trade observers through its opening weekend.