Tees — Maar Khan

When the Police Commissioner (played by ) arrests Tees Maar Khan for petty theft, he offers him a deal: pull off the heist of the century by robbing that ruby, and walk free.

The most famous scene remains the "coin toss" sequence where he convinces a villager that heads he wins, tails he loses—but because the coin lands on its edge, the villager is somehow convinced to pay up. It makes no sense, and that is precisely the joke. tees maar khan

Enter the antagonist: a gloriously over-the-top art dealer named Suresh "Bali" (a scene-stealing ). Bali has smuggled a priceless 500-carat "Romanov Ruby" out of Russia, intending to transport it via a special high-security train from Delhi to Mumbai. When the Police Commissioner (played by ) arrests

The twist? Tees Maar Khan hatches a plan so absurd it only works in a Farah Khan movie. Instead of boarding the train, he decides to build a fake railway track, a fake train station ("Aturr"), and hire a fake film crew. He kidnaps a struggling director and forces him to shoot a "documentary" while the crew robs the real train. To complete the ruse, he enlists a wannabe actress from his neighborhood, Anya Khan (played by ), to seduce the security guards. The Star Power: Akshay Kumar at his Wackiest Akshay Kumar has done action; he has done patriotism. But in Tees Maar Khan , he abandoned all logic for slapstick. His portrayal of the titular con man is essentially Akshay doing a parody of himself. The swagger, the Khiladi-style somersaults, and the rapid-fire delivery reach peak absurdity. Enter the antagonist: a gloriously over-the-top art dealer

But here is the defense: It was never supposed to be logical.

Farah Khan achieved what very few directors can: she made a film that does not take itself seriously for a single frame. is a parody of heist films, a parody of Bollywood, and a parody of Akshay Kumar's action-hero image all rolled into one.