Paying Guests is a 2009 Indian Hindi-language comedy drama film starring Ashish Chaudhary, Shreyas Talpade, Javed Jaffrey, Vatsal Seth, Celina Jaitly, Neha Dhupia, Riya Sen, Sayali Bhagat and Johnny Lever. It is directed by Paritosh Painter under Subhash Ghai's Mukta Arts banner. It is a comedy film revolving around four close friends who reside together in Pattaya. The film is a Hindi adaptation of Sailesh Dey's Bengali play Joymakali Boarding.[1]

Paying Guests
Directed byParitosh Painter
Written byParitosh Painter
Based onSailesh Dey's Bengali play Joymakali Boarding
Produced by
Starring
CinematographySelva Kumar
Edited byManish More
Music bySajid–Wajid
Production
company
Release date
  • 19 June 2009 (2009-06-19)
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

Shooting started in the second week of April 2008.[2] Riya Sen was originally offered Neha Dhupia's role, Aarti Gupta, but declined and instead chose the role as Jayesh's melodramatic girlfriend, Alpita. A sequel, Paying Guests 2, is in production and will take place against the backdrop of a beauty pageant.[3]

Plot

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Three friends—Bhavesh (Shreyas Talpade), Parag (Javed Jaffrey), and Pariksheet (Ashish Chaudhary)—live in Pattaya as paying guests in a house owned by Kiska Miglani (Asrani). Bhavesh works as a chef in a restaurant called Namaste India, owned by Ballu Singh (Johnny Lever). Ballu has a younger brother, Ronnie (Chunky Pandey), who wants ownership of the restaurant because he owes a considerable amount of money to a gangster, Murli (Inder Kumar). Parag is a screenwriter for a television channel, and Parikshit is a car salesman working for Aarti Gupta (Neha Dhupia). Eventually all three of them lose their jobs. The three friends are later joined by Jayesh (Vatsal Seth) from Mumbai, who is a cousin of Parikshit's, and tells them that an apartment is included if he gets a job at an architecture firm. After getting drunk celebrating Jayesh's arrival, they privately insult Kiska, who arrives back home unexpectedly, hears what they are saying, and kicks them out. They go out in search of a place to stay, and a friend of Parikshit's suggests paid lodgings. Parikshit and Jayesh go to the home to find its owner is Ballu Singh, to whom they are oblivious of the fact that he is Bhavesh's former employer. Ballu and his wife, Sweety (Delnaaz Paul), agree to let them stay on one condition: they must be married.

Parag poses as Jayesh's wife, Kareena, and Bhavesh as Karishma, Parikshit's wife. Jayesh gets the job and will get the allotment to the flat in fifteen days' time. Ballu Singh and Sweety leave to pick up Sweety's sister, Kalpana (Celina Jaitly). When they arrive home, Jayesh's girlfriend, Alpita (Riya Sen), arrives with them and sees the four friends having (what she believes is) sex. She is instantly outraged at Jayesh and leaves him. Meanwhile, Parag seeks permission to marry Seema from her father (Paintel), and Bhavesh, while wooing Kalpana, finds himself in a situation where Ronnie tries to rape Karishma, and in the process of saving Bhavesh, Jayesh nearly drowns him by accident.

While discussing the event with Parag and Parikshit, he discovers the apple he has been eating has half a worm in it. Sweety hears Bhavesh vomit and mistakes him for someone being pregnant. In the meantime, Paintel has agreed that Parag can marry Seema, Aarti has fallen for Parikshit, Kalpana has chosen Bhavesh as her life partner, and Jayesh has reconciled with Alpita. The four friends decide that it is time for them to tell Ballu and Sweety the truth. In a shopping centre, an accomplice of Ronnie's sees them and tells Ronnie.

When they come home, they find Ronnie, Ballu Singh, and Sweety there, but they do not know that anyone except the villain is there. Ronnie has persuaded Ballu to sign the papers transferring ownership of the restaurant; Bhavesh snatches the papers away, and they all end up in a theater showing of Mughal-e-Azam, where they all don various costumes and each make their own humorous attempts to retrieve the documents. Ballu gets back to the restaurant and forgives them on one condition: they give them the dream of a small child in the house, which they gladly set out to do.

Cast

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Box office

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Paying Guests had a weak start but sales picked up in subsequent weeks and the film was declared a semi-hit.

Music

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Paying Guests
Soundtrack album by
Released
21 May 2009 (India)
GenreFeature film soundtrack
LabelJunglee Music

Music is composed by Sajid–Wajid with lyrics provided by Jalees Sherwani, Wajid, A K Upadhyay.

Track listing [4]
No.TitleArtist(s)Length
1."Jack & Jill"Shaan, Earl D'Souza3:56
2."Jack & Jill" (remix)Shaan, Earl D'Souza4:04
3."Nazar Se Nazaria"Sunidhi Chauhan3:57
4."Nazar Se Nazaria" (remix)Sunidhi Chauhan3:29
5."Paying Guests"Wajid4:22
6."Ya Rabul Aalameen"Sonu Nigam, Amrita Kak, Earl D'Souza4:31

References

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  1. ^ Rajadhyaksha, Ashish; Willemen, Paul (10 July 2014). Encyclopedia of Indian Cinema. Routledge. ISBN 9781135943257 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ Mukta Arts launches 'Paying Guest'
  3. ^ Harshikaa Udasi (29 June 2009). "Makeover specialist". The Hindu. Chennai, India. Archived from the original on 7 November 2012. Retrieved 10 January 2010.
  4. ^ "Paying Guests Soundtrack". Bollywood Hungama. Archived from the original on 18 January 2008.
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