Golmaal 3 was released on 4 November 2010, coinciding with Diwali.[8] The film received mixed reviews, with praise for its humour and performances but criticism for its repetitive jokes and narrative. Nevertheless, the film was a blockbuster and became the fourth film to enter the 100 Crore Club in India, eventually nearing a final worldwide total of ₹167 crore (US$20 million). The film was ranked as the second highest-grossing film of 2010 in India after Dabangg and third worldwide behind Dabangg and My Name Is Khan.
The story follows Pritam a.k.a. Pappu, an elderly bus driver. His three good-for-nothing sons, Madhav, the group leader; Laxman, the poetic idiot; and Lucky, the innocent mute, are always up to trouble, mostly by scamming people. On the other hand, Geeta a.k.a. Guddi is an elderly woman whose two sons, Laxman, the stammerer; and Gopal, the strong but kind leader; own a water sports stall at the beach owned by them and is funded by their don named Vasooli Bhai. Gopal and Laxman's partner is Daboo, Gopal's girlfriend.
Madhav, Laxman 2, and Lucky's don, Pappi, and his goons Daga and Teja rob the queen's necklace and are on the run from the police, they end up in Goa. Pappi, who suffers from short-term memory, hides the necklace in Pritam's house. Soon enough, both groups meet at a bar, and Pritam's sons open a water sports shack opposite Geeta's sons' stall, and a rivalry begins. Filled with mayhem, both groups try to take down each other's duplicate businesses but fail hilariously. In response to this, Pritam goes to meet Geeta (unaware that they are Geeta's sons) to sort out this rivalry and learns that Geeta is his college sweetheart. Daboo overhears their love story and decides to get the two married, without their sons' permission.
After the marriage, the two families start living in one house, filled with non-stop laughter and mayhem, with both groups trying and failing to evict the other. During Daboo's birthday celebration at a mall, one of the debtors of Pritam's sons named Raghu attacks the group and Geeta is injured. Gopal, who refused to accompany the group earlier, shows up and the five sons fight off Raghu and his goons. Later that day, the five boys blame each other for not solving their own problems and how it hurt their father and mother respectively. An argument takes place between Pritam & Geeta and Daboo. The argument is overheard by Lucky and finds out that they are not Pritam and Geeta's sons, but orphans, when Daboo threatens Pritam and Geeta that she will confess it to them. After Lucky informs the others and Daboo follows him and confesses it herself, the boys vow not to tell the couple that they know they are orphans, and to hide that, they become like brothers. They also open a large toy store with the help of Vasooli Bhai and Pappi for money. Upon meeting Pritam during the store's opening, Pappi remembers where he hid the necklace and turns himself in, but accidentally & unintentionally makes everyone believe that Pritam was the one who stole the necklace, causing a long squabble and chase. Pritam finds the necklace after the mayhem and arrests Pappi and his goons after Gopal and Daboo trick him into revealing the location of the hidden necklace.
Later, Pritam and Geeta go on their honeymoon while Gopal, Madhav, Lucky, and the two Laxmans end up brawling after an argument over their rooms. During the argument, Daboo tries to stop them, but they don't. The film ends with Daboo saying “that’s it i can’t tolerate this anymore but only one man can” on the camera and pulls the director of the film, Rohit Shetty, and other crew members to stop their argument. The whole cast and crew enter the frame to stop them together, which itself creates chaos.
The soundtrack was composed by Pritam ( Ale, Apna Har Din, Apna Har Din Remix) and Amar Mohile (Disco Dancer and Yaad aa Rahi hai). Rest of the songs were composed by Pritam and Amar together
while lyrics were written by Kumaar. Amar Mohile wrote Disco Dancer and Yaad aa Rahi Hai
On the review-aggregation website Mirchiplex.com, the film was scored 2/5 based on 12 reviews.[9] Mayank Shekhar of Hindustan Times rated it 1.5/5 and noted that "the filmmakers have six main actors to juggle with, and as many side comedians to lend parts to. Never mind the narrative, they would be happy with as any corny antics and dialogues with whoever was available."[10] Raja Sen of Rediff.com gave a similar rating explaining that "[he] was not looking for sensitivity or smarts in Golmaal 3 [but for]... a few good jokes. [However], the film does not oblige."[11] On the other hand, critic Taran Adarsh of Bollywood Hungama rated it 4/5, concluding that "Golmaal 3 is an ideal fun ride with thrice the enjoyment and gratification, thrice the magic and thrice the hilarity."[12]The Times of India explained that "[although] the comic acts get repetitive...there is a laugh riot waiting for you at the multiplex this weekend."[13]Vinayak Chakravorty of Mail Today gave it 3 stars out of 5.
Indian Stammering Association criticism
The Indian Stammering Association (TISA), based in Dehradun, started an online petition to the censor board against the comical depiction of stuttering, a disabling disorder that affects millions of children and many adults.[14]
In October 2010 TISA filed a public interest writ petition against the director and producers of the film Golmaal 3 and the censor board of India at Uttarakhand High Court. It objected to the film's portrayal of stammerers as objects of ridicule, on the grounds that this promoted discrimination and the teasing and bullying of people who stammer. The film-makers and Censor Board were to respond to the court notice by 14 December 2010. After that, the court was to hear this case.[15][16]
Box office
Golmaal 3 released in India and internationally on 4 November 2010 to coincide with the Diwali weekend, usually considered a profitable time of the year.[2] The film's opening collections on the first day reached ₹ 83 million[17] and opening weekend net collections stood at ₹ 335 million.[18] Opening week gross collections were around ₹ 622.5 million in India and ₹ 100 million overseas.[19]
The film had a strong second weekend in theatres, grossing ₹ 190 million.[20] During its second and third week at the Indian box office, the film grossed ₹ 317.5 million[21] and ₹ 90 million respectively, therefore increasing the film's total to ₹ 1075.6 million.[22] Meanwhile, the film earned $1,132,192 in United States and Canada, £638,496 in UK and $352,063 in Australia.[23]Golmaal 3 became the second highest-grossing Hindi film of 2010.[24]
^Kazmi, Nikhat. "Golmaal 3 Review". The Times of India. Retrieved 5 November 2010.
^Online Petition by TISA: "On behalf of people who stammer, we, The Indian Stammering Association, wish to lodge a strong protest with the Central Board of Film Certification (popularly known as the Censor Board of India), with respect to the movie Golmaal-3 " http://stammer.in/about-tisa.htmlArchived 15 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine