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We ended with the immigrant comedy. Amrinder Gill and Simi Chahal trying to survive in Birmingham. The scene where they cook sarson da saag in a posh British apartment and set off the fire alarm? Gill paused the movie and said, "Uncle, I’m not sad about exams anymore. I’m sad I’ve been missing these movies."

Nikka, a student, falls in love with Manraj. To get close to her, he devises a plan that backfires spectacularly, leading to misunderstandings about his relationship with another woman. He ends up married (technically) but unable to consummate or acknowledge the marriage due to family pressure, leading to a very funny struggle of trying to get a divorce he doesn't actually want.

By 1 AM, we were on the sequel. The courtroom scene where Sonam Bajwa’s father mistakes Gippy Grewal for a lawyer—"I'm not a lawyer, I'm a liar !"—made Gill fall off the sofa. "Uncle, this is stupider than my exam paper." "Exactly," I said. "That's the beauty."

The Night We Tried to Watch Them All

The film follows Jass (Gippy Grewal), a loafer who falls for a girl from a family that demands their son-in-law live with them. To marry her, he creates a web of lies, pretending to be an orphan. This spirals into a chaotic sequence where he has to borrow a fake family, leading to multiple characters pretending to be someone they aren't—all under one roof.