New Punjabi Movie 2024 Updated May 2026
Neeru doesn’t just play the love interest; she commands the screen. Her Pooja is no damsel. She’s a clever, street-smart woman who wears the turban (figuratively and literally in one heist scene). Her verbal sparring with Diljit feels natural, not scripted. The highlight is a monologue in the second half where she explains to the Spanish bride why a Punjabi wedding isn’t just a party, but a “50-hour endurance test of love.”
The story kicks into high gear when they accidentally lose a Maharaja’s priceless wedding ring on the day of a royal wedding between a Sikh prince and a Spanish aristocrat. To avoid being thrown into a dungeon (or worse, a viral Instagram reel), they must go undercover—Fateh as a flamboyant royal chef, and Pooja as a stern wedding planner—to get the ring back before midnight. new punjabi movie 2024
If there is one thing the Punjabi film industry (Pollywood) knows how to do better than anyone else, it is the massive , over-the-top, heartwarming romantic comedy. And in 2024, the king of that throne is back. After nearly a decade, the iconic duo of and Neeru Bajwa reunite for Jatt & Juliet 3 , a film that isn’t just a sequel—it’s a coronation. The Plot: From Canada to a Royal Mess Director Jagdeep Sidhu (known for Qismat 2 and Lekh ) picks up where the 2013 classic left off, but with a turbocharged twist. Forget chasing girls across Canada. This time, Fateh Singh (Diljit) and Pooja (Neeru) are now a chaotic, bickering married couple working as event planners in London. Neeru doesn’t just play the love interest; she
The twist? The prince (played by debutant ) has fallen in love with a commoner, and the Spanish bride’s ex-boyfriend, a flamboyant football star (a hilarious cameo by Ranjit Bawa ), shows up to sabotage everything. Her verbal sparring with Diljit feels natural, not scripted
Laughter, Love, and a Ludicrous Amount of Turban-Twisting Trouble.
By: The Punjabi Pulse Desk Published: March 2024
But more than the visuals, it is the energy . The whistle-worthy dialogues, the freeze-frame jokes, and the final climax set during a Gatka (martial art) performance will have you cheering. Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (4/5)