‘The Great Shamsuddin Family’ is a Hindi-language comedy-drama movie streaming on JioHotstar. The film is written and directed by Anusha Rizvi, and it captures the chaos, emotions, and chemistry of a large Muslim family through events that take place in just one single day. Kritika Kamra plays the lead role in this warm and witty film.
Film Setup
At the centre of the story is Bani (played by Kritika Kamra), a writer who must finish an important, career-defining assignment within 12 hours. But on the same morning, her entire extended family unexpectedly arrives at her home. This sets the stage for a full day of drama, arguments, conversations, secrets, and laughter — all happening inside Bani’s apartment and all within that same day.
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Structure and Story Flow
The film highlights certain specific angles —
- old family grudges resurfacing,
- interfaith and generation-gap discussions,
- emotional and financial dependency within families,
- and long-hidden issues that come out in surprising ways.
Bani’s 12-hour writing deadline keeps the entire film moving like a ticking clock. With every new episode, more relatives enter the story, new problems emerge, and more secrets are revealed. The tone remains dramatic yet comedic, giving the film a “dramedy” feel.
Characters and Performances
Kritika Kamra shines as Bani — a millennial/Gen-Z working woman stuck between her ambitious global career and traditional joint-family responsibilities. Her frustration, exhaustion, affection, and emotional breakdowns feel very real throughout the episodes.
The supporting cast features a powerhouse of female performers —
Farida Jalal, Sheeba Chaddha, Dolly Ahluwalia, Natasha Rastogi, Shreya Dhanwanthary, and others — together forming one of the strongest women-led ensembles on OTT.
Male actors like Purab Kohli play supporting yet meaningful parts — an old lover, cousins, or restless in-laws — adding balance to the chaotic family dynamics.
The conversations and conflicts feel so natural that the show often feels less like fiction and more like an actual family argument playing out in front of you.
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Themes: Family, Faith, and Society
Though the film is set in a Muslim household, its themes reflect the everyday life of almost any big Indian joint family:
- interfaith relationships,
- career vs marriage pressures,
- dreams of going abroad,
- and children growing up with different value systems than their parents.
These topics are explored without heavy speeches — only through conversations and relatable situations.
Anusha Rizvi brings a style of social commentary that was earlier seen in Peepli Live, but this time the setting is not a newsroom — it’s a kitchen, living room, and a house packed with relatives.
Writing, Direction, and Pace
The strongest aspect of the movie is its honest writing and grounded direction. Despite being set in one location and almost real time, the show never looks visually dull or emotionally monotonous.
However, the film may feel too fast at times — certain character arcs or subplots seem unfinished because everything is squeezed into one single day.
Should You Watch It?
If you enjoy:
- dialogue-heavy films,
- character-driven stories,
- relatable family chaos,
- emotional yet humorous moments,
…then The Great Shamsuddin Family makes for a warm and engaging weekend binge.
Viewers who like women-centric dramas, urban family setups, and authentic Muslim family representation will especially find a lot to appreciate.
Yes, the pace is a little uneven, and a few subplots feel rushed, but the emotional warmth and strong performances make it a worthwhile watch.
Rating: 3.5/5

