JOLLY LLB 3 OTT Release Confirmed! Akshay Kumar vs Arshad Warsi: Cast, Plot, & Where to Watch⚖️ The Final Verdict is IN!

By Kiyara

Published on: November 15, 2025

Follow Us

JOLLY LLB 3

INFORMATION: RELEASED DATE

The movie Jolly LLB 3, starring Akshay Kumar and Arshad Warsi, has already been released in theaters and is available for streaming online. Key UpdatesTheatrical Release Date: The film premiered in cinemas on September 19, 2025.OTT Release Date: It became available for streaming on Netflix starting November 14, 2025.Cast and Crew: The film features Akshay Kumar and Arshad Warsi as the two rival lawyers, with Saurabh Shukla returning as Judge Sunderlal Tripathi, the widely praised “soul of the narrative”. Other cast members include Huma Qureshi, Amrita Rao, Seema Biswas, and Gajraj Rao. It was written and directed by Subhash Kapoor.

The storyline centers on a land dispute case involving farmers’ issues and illegal land acquisition, a theme reportedly inspired by the 2011 Bhatta and Parsaul protests. The two “Jolly” lawyers initially compete fiercely before uniting for the cause of justice.Reception: The film received generally positive reviews from critics and audiences, who appreciated the blend of humor, courtroom drama, and social commentary, though some found it not as impactful as the previous installments.Box Office: It performed well at the box office, with a total collection of around ₹166.06 crore worldwide.

ABOUT MOVIE

Jolly LLB 3 is a 2025 Indian Hindi-language legal comedy drama film written and directed by Subhash Kapoor. It is the third installment in the Jolly LLB series and the sequel to Jolly LLB 2. The film stars Akshay Kumar, Seema Biswas, Arshad Warsi, and Saurabh Shukla, with Amrita Rao and Huma Qureshi all reprising their roles from the previous films . The film was released on 19 September 2025 and received generally positive reviews.

A LITTLE GLANCE AT THE MOVIE

The film begins with a message that it’s based on true events that happened in Bhatta and Parsaul villages of Gautam Buddha Nagar district in Uttar Pradesh in 2011.In the District and Sessions Court of Bikaner, Rajasthan, poet and farmer Rajaram Solanki from Parsaul village, loses possession of his mortgaged agricultural land to local developer Raghunath Bharadwaj, for failing to repay dues. His widowed daughter-in-law, Varsha, tries to raise the point that the papers of the deal have been forged, but is brushed aside as a woman. A broken Rajaram writes a poem lamenting how he wanted to bequeath his land to his now-dead son, and his misfortune as a farmer. He then commits suicide by drowning himself.A few years later, both versions of ‘Jolly’—Meerut’s Jagdish Tyagi and Kanpur’s Jagdishwar Mishra—are now practising as advocates in Delhi’s Sessions Court. Their common nickname often leads to one losing clients to another, leading to physical fights. When an NGO working for farmers’ rights sends the case of Parsaul’s 40 protesting farmers to Tyagi, he purposely diverts them to Mishra as revenge, knowing they did not bring much with them. When he tries to do the same to Janki, Rajaram Solanki’s widow, who had approached Tyagi’s wife and NGO worker Sandhya, Mishra brings her to the Tyagi residence. Sandhya convinces Tyagi to fight the case pro bono.Parsaul’s farmers are protesting the acquisition of their land for industrialist Haribhai Khaitan’s ‘Bikaner to Boston’ project. Khaitan has an understanding with local MLA Iqbal Singh Shekhawat and DM Avik Sengupta. To nullify Tyagi and Janki’s case without drawing too much media attention, Khaitan’s right-hand man, Shrivastav, hires a local lawyer, Mishra. The case reaches the court of Justice Sunderlal Tripathi, who flies into a rage after seeing both versions of Jolly in his courtroom, having known them from the first and second films. Mishra wins the case and has Janki’s complaint dismissed, prompting Khaitan to invite him to his party and hire him for future cases.Janki visits Mishra’s residence and confronts him with her story. Khaitan had earlier visited Parsaul and tried to settle the conflict over Rajaram’s suicide and villagers’ opposition to land acquisition by handing over a compensation cheque to Janki. Her public refusal of the money had scandalised Khaitan, and he tried to get back at her by spreading rumours about an extramarital affair between Rajaram and Varsha, leading to the latter hanging herself. Mishra is ashamed and, after a talk with his wife, Pushpa, decides to side with Janki against Khaitan. As a symbolic gesture, the two Jollys disrupt a car race on the ‘Bikaner to Boston’ project’s new racetrack using camels.Tyagi manages to have the case reopened after the 40 Parsaul villagers who had earlier consulted Mishr join Janki as co-complainants. Khaitan and Shrivastav fly in renowned lawyer Vikram Ray Chaudhary from London to represent their company. As the two Jollys bicker, their case appears to crumble, but Justice Tripathi allows them time to correct their affidavits before he passes a final order. When an attendant privately points out the partiality towards the Jollys in this decision, Justice Tripathi reminds him that the spirit of the law is as important as the letter, and the duo deserve time as honest lawyers.The district administration under DM Sengupta tries to force the issue on the ground by using police force on Parsaul. Tyagi and Mishra advise the villagers to remain calm and non-violent, but a shooter sent by MLA Shekhawat fires at Sengupta to give the police a reason to attack the villagers. Mishra pursues the shooter, but the latter is shot and killed before capture. Tyagi is injured and hospitalised, and the violence leads to multiple fatalities.On the final hearing day in court, Vikram makes a powerful speech, noting how industrialists like Khaitan must be supported by the judiciary if India has to unlock its potential and become rich and developed. He claims that Khaitan has used his own hard-earned money to provide avenues for the country’s growing middle class to enjoy luxuries. For the progress of the nation, he argues, some people have to make sacrifices. Mishra counters him by exposing how most of Khaitan’s projects are financed through loans from nationalised banks, and how economic expert Milind Desai’s report on the ‘Boston to Bikaner’ project is biased, since his firm prepares reports almost exclusively for Khaitan’s company. He also explains how Khaitan uses small developers like Bharadwaj to defraud indebted farmers like Rajaram Solanki, acquiring land dirt cheap and selling it at a premium. Tyagi then enters the courtroom with a witness—a seriously injured Sengupta, whom Tyagi met while in the hospital, who testifies that he received bribes from Khaitan, and the bullet removed from his body came from Shekhawat’s registered rifle. Tyagi concludes his argument by showing Khaitan, Vikram, and Justice Tripathi pictures of their homes and saying that they need to be demolished for progress, asking why only the poor and vulnerable like Rajaram and Janki should always be the people making sacrifices for the nation, rather than the rich and influential like Khaitan and Vikram.Justice Tripathi delivers his verdict, ruling that Khaitan’s land purchases for the project are illegal due to multiple violations of the Land Acquisition Act. He also orders a judicial inquiry into the circumstances of Rajaram and Varsha’s suicides, and the violence in Parsaul. The film ends with Tyagi and Mishra being celebrated by the villagers, with the slogan of Jai Jawan, Jai Kisan, and asks viewers to thank a farmer when they have their next meal

BUDGET OF THE MOVIE

Budget of JOLLY LLB. .3 is ₹120 crore. It is a courtroom drama directed by SUBASH KAPOOR. Acting is done by Akshay Kumar and Ashad Warsii.

Budget : ₹ 120 cr

Actors: AKshay Kumar, Rshad Warsi, Urvashi Shukla

Director: Subash Kapoor

Releasing Date 19 September 2025

INFORMATION ABOUT JOLLY LLB: PART (1)

Jagdishwar “Jolly” Mishra is a Lucknow-based lawyer who stays with his wife Pu, Shapa Pandey, nd son. Despite being a lawyer, he works as a menial assistant to one of the most famous lawyers of Lucknow, Mr. Rizvi, for whom his father had worked as an assistant for 30 years. He is street smart and dreams of his own law chamber. Seeking to arrange money for his own chamber, Jolly lies to a widow, Hina Qasim, telling her that Mr. Rizvi will take her case and that the fee is 200,000 rupees. When Hina finds out that Jolly lied to her, she commits suicide. Jolly soon discovers that Hina’s husband, Iqbal Qasim, was killed in a fake encounter on 13 August 2015, the very next day of their marriage, by Inspector Suryaveer Singh, who depicted him as Mohammed Iqbal Quadri, a terrorist, in official documents. Singh also shot a fellow constable, Baldev Singh Bhadauria, to show the encounter as genuine, leading to his death. Filled with guilt, Jolly decides to fight Hina’s case and files a PIL. Singh then hires Lucknow’s best lawyer, Pramod Mathur, to fight his case. After reprimanding Jolly for his mistakes in filing the PIL and no credible evidence, Justice Sunderlal Tripathi gives a date for the hearing and warns Jolly to collect some evidence before the hearing. Jollycano got a copy of the FIR and other papers regarding the case with the help of a bookie, Guru Ji, in Varanasi, by paying him a sum of ₹500,000 by selling his own chamber. Later, he canoed to track Ram Kumar Bhadauria, the son of the constable who died in the fake encounter. This backfires as Mathur uses his power and money to tamper with the narco test video of the witness. However, even though Justice Tripathi orders disciplinary action against Jolly for showing allegedly dishonest evidence, the Chairman of the Disciplinary Committee, who turns out to be Mr. Rizvi himself, gives Jolly four days of time to prove his worth, as he feels guilty for not fighting the case in good standing. Jolly and Pushpa, while analyzing Hina and Iqbal Qasim’s wedding album, notice an unknown cop from Kashmir called Fahim Bhat. Jolly travels to Kashmir and gets confirmation of the truth from Fahim, who visited Lucknow to identify the terrorist during Iqbal Qasim and Hina’s wedding. Fahim, now suspended and arrested in a fake case, reveals that Qasim, who died in the encounter, was not the real terrorist and that he also filed a complaint against Singh. Jolly flees with Fahim to Lucknow. Meanwhile, Jolly coaxes the police commissioner, V.K. Paul, to tell the truth, or else he will file a PIL against all the encounters done by him. Mathur tries his best to avoid Fahim from stating in the court as he stops the proceedings in the courtroom by sitting on the floor in protest. Justice Tripathi also sits on the floor, refusing to be swayed by Mathur’s tactics. At midnight, Justice Tripathi ignores Mathur’s plea and decides to carry on the proceedings. After Fahim’s statement, Jolly, with help from Paul, presents Quadri, who fakes his identity as a Brahmin Pandit. After initial reluctance from Justice Tripathi, Jolly rapidly fires questions at Iqbal by asking him details of the Shastras. Iqbal finally admits that he is the terrorist, Quadri, and had bribed Singh to set him free. Justice Tripathi then declares Qasim innocent and orders Quadri’s arrest, giving life imprisonment to Singh along with his accomplices on charges of murder, erasing evidence, misleading the court, and showing false evidence as Jolly wins the case.

The budget of the film “Jolly LLB 1” was approximately ₹20-25 crore. This is a significant difference from the ₹120 crore budget of “Jolly LLB 3.” 

INFORMATION ABOUT JOLLY LLB PART (2)

Jolly LLB 2 (marketed as The State vs. Jolly LL.B 2) is a 2017 Indian Hindi-language legal comedy drama film written and directed by Subhash Kapoor. A standalone sequel to the 2013 film Jolly LLB, it stars Akshay Kumar as Jagdishwar Mishra, with Huma Qureshi, Annu Kapoor, and Kumud Mishra in supporting roles. Saurabh Shukla, Sanjay Mishra, and Brijendra Kala reprise their characters from the original film. Based in Lucknow, the story follows a lawyer who fights a case against a ruthless and powerful advocate to bring justice to the deceased victim of a fake encounter involving a corrupt police officer and a terrorist presumed dead.

Jolly LL.B. 2 opened worldwide on 10 February 2017, and made on an investment of ₹450 million (US$5.3 million), earned ₹2 billion (US$24 million) worldwide to become a major critical and commercial success, with praise for the writing and execution by Subhash Kapoor, as well as the performances of Kumar, Shukla and Kapoor, as well as Mishra.

Let ‘snow about AKHSAY KUMAR

Akshay Hari Om Bhatia (born Rajiv Hari Om Bhatia; 9 September 1967[2]), known professionally as Akshay Kumar, is an Indian actor and film producer working in Hindi cinema. Referred to in the media as “Khiladi Kumar”, through his career spanning over 30 years, Kumar has appeared in over 150 films and has won several awards, including two National Film Awards and two Filmfare Awards. He received the Padma Shri, India’s fourth-highest civilian honour, from the Government of India in 2009. Kumar is one of the most prolific actors in Indian cinema. Forbes included Kumar in their lists of both the highest-paid celebrities and the highest-paid actors in the world from 2015 to 2020.

BEGINNING OF WORKING CARRIER

Kumar began his career in 1991 with Saugandh and had his first commercial success a year later with the action thriller Khiladi. The film established him as an action star in the 1990s and led to several films in the Khiladi film series, in addition to other action films such as Mohra (1994) and Jaanwar (1999). Although his early tryst with romance in Yeh Dillagi (1994) was positively received, it was in the next decade that Kumar expanded his range of roles. He gained recognition for the romantic films Dhadkan (2000), Andaaz (2003), Namastey London (2007), and for his slapstick comic performances in several films, including Hera Pheri (2000), Mujhse Shaadi Karogi (2004), Phir Hera Pheri (2006), Bhool Bhulaiyaa (2007), and Singh Is Kinng (2008). Kumar won Filmfare Awards for his negative role in Ajnabee (2001) and his comic performance in Garam Masala (2005).

PAST LIFE

Kumar was born on 9 September 1967 as Rajiv Hari Om Bhatia, in the Chandni Chowk area of Old Delhi, into a Punjabi Hindu family from Amritsar, to parents Hari Om Bhatia (later Brijmohan Bhatia) and Aruna Bhatia. His father was an Army officer in India. From a young age, Kumar was very interested in sports, and his father also enjoyed wrestling. He lived and grew up in Delhi’s Chandni Chowk and later moved to Bombay, Maharashtra, when his father left the Army to become an accountant with UNICEF. Soon, his sister was born, and the family lived in Koliwada, a Punjabi-dominated area of Central Bombay. He received his school education from Don Bosco High School in Matunga, simultaneously learning Karate. He enrolled in the Guru Nanak Khalsa College of Arts, Science & Commerce of the University of Mumbai for higher education, but dropped out as he was not interested in studies. He requested his father to send him to Thailand to further learn martial arts. Kumar lived in Bangkok for five years, learning Thai Boxing.

FAMILY AND RELATIONSHIP

Relationships and family. During the late 90s, Kumar was in a relationship with actress Raveena Tandon. Although they were engaged, they later parted ways. From 1997 to 2000, Kumar was in a relationship with actress Shilpa Shetty. Kumar met actress Twinkle Khanna, the daughter of actors Rajesh Khanna and Dimple Kapadia, during a photo session for Filmfare magazine. Kumar married Khanna on 17 January 2001. Together have a son (Aarav, born 2002) and a daughter (Nitara, born 2012). He is known as a protective father and keeps his children away from the media. He stated that he wants to “give them a normal childhood.” Kumar often credits Khanna for his success. In 2009, while performing at a show for Levi’s at Lakme Fashion Week, Kumar asked Twinkle to unbutton his jeans. This incident sparked a controversy that led to a police case.

🎬 Primary OTT Platform

PlatformStatusRelease Date
NetflixConfirmed & StreamingNovember 14, 2025

For more, check: mizulet

, , , , , , , , , , ,

Leave a ReplyCancel reply

Exit mobile version