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"A Punjabi singer raised in England returns to his roots to care for his ailing grandfather — and falls into an impossible love that forces two estranged families, two generations, and two worlds to choose between pride and redemption."
Romance · Family Drama · NRI Diaspora · Cultural
"Can the power of love overcome all worldly oppositions?"
Universal theatrical release across India, UK, Canada, USA, Australia and Middle East — targeting the 125M+ global Punjabi-speaking audience. Simultaneous OTT rights negotiation with Amazon Prime, Netflix, and Zee5 International.
Tara is born in a Punjab village. At a birth celebration, his father Lambardar quarrels with uncle Gaj, who threatens never to let Lambardar set foot in his village. Lambardar vows the same. Years later, Tara's father moves to the UK. Tara follows at age 11, grows up, completes his education, and becomes a renowned Punjabi singer.
Grandfather Dara Singh falls critically ill. Tara returns to Punjab. On a bus to meet his aunt Dhan Kaur, he notices a spirited college girl — Jeeti. A chance meeting at the next stop turns into a confrontation. She turns around, expecting a stalker. She finds her aunt's nephew.
Jeeti is already engaged to Gary — arranged by uncle Master Ji. Tara falls hard. Family feuds, village honor, and a decades-old oath now stand between two hearts.
Grandfather Dara and reformed uncle Gaj secretly conspire to arrange the wedding in a neutral village — outside both families' turf — to bypass Lambardar's vow.
Gary's men sabotage the wedding car. A tragic accident. The love story ends — unfinished. The most powerful kind of ending: one the audience completes.
Styling: Rim light, depth blur BG, warm cinematic tone
A chart-topping Punjabi singer in the UK who has fame, comfort, and carefully maintained distance from his origins. Then his grandfather Dara falls ill — and Punjab calls him home.
Tara returns expecting nostalgia. He finds Jeeti instead. And then he finds the impossible weight of a family feud he never created — but must now either inherit or end.
"He left Punjab as a boy chasing his father's ghost. He returns as a man — and meets the love of his life in the village he was never supposed to enter."
Styling: Warm Punjab light, dupatta frame, soft vignette
A sharp-tongued, strong-willed college girl raised in Punjab. She speaks her mind to strangers and stays silent with family — a contradiction that is her prison and her power. Already engaged by family decree, she never said yes. She never said no.
When Tara arrives, her certainty cracks. She must choose between the life arranged for her — and the life she actually wants. In a world where girls don't choose, she will be the first.
"She told him this isn't England. She was wrong about one thing: the heart doesn't change passports."
Tara ↔ Jeeti: love across forbidden territory. Dara ↔ Gaj: old enemies turned quiet conspirators. Master ↔ Tara: cousin loyalty tested by love. Gary ↔ Jeeti: a broken promise with violent consequences.
Gary discovers Tara and Jeeti together in the park. He gathers friends and ambushes Tara at a bus stop. Tara fights them off. But Gary's final move — sabotaging the wedding car — is the one no one can fight.
Putt Jattan De · Ucha Dar
Nikka Zaildar · Sat Shri Akaal
Nikka Zaildar · A Tale of Punjab
Legend of Bhagat Singh
Film with Gurdas Mann
Gandhi Fer Aa Gea
Asa Nu Maan Watna Da
Shaina Batta & Gaurav Bhagat — fresh talent bringing authentic emotional energy to the lead roles of Jeeti and Tara respectively.
Gurpreet Singh · Prabhpreet Singh · Tally — Punjab's most beloved comic trio. The heartbeat of lightness in a dramatic world. + 32 artists in supporting roles.
Raju Singh · Sukhjinder Alfaaz · T. Singh Bilga — decades of combined Punjabi chartbuster credentials.
DoP: Babu · Rakesh · Bawa · Bill K — multi-format cinematic language across Punjab's golden fields and UK's rain-lit streets.
Head: Bunty Saroj Mohanty · Editor: Gurmeet Duggal · DI: Avik Banerjee · Colorist: Navin Kumar Sharma & team · Ganraj Studio, Mumbai.
Bill Media Enterprises U.K. · Line Producer: Santosh Maurya · Marketing Head: Soniya Ajwani · VFX: Danish Khan & Sanjana Maurya · Office Staff Mumbai: Uday Sankpal, Pradeep Shrivastav
Tara's journey as a UK-based Punjabi singer is inseparable from the soundtrack. Every song is a scene. Every scene carries a song. The music sells the film before the trailer does — and keeps audiences returning after it ends.
Golden-hour Punjab meets silver-blue UK interiors. The visual grammar shifts between worlds: warm, textured skin tones in village scenes — cool, desaturated frames in London. Shot in 4K with anamorphic lenses for that impossibly rich, depth-layered Punjabi landscape look.
Theatrical Revenue
- India (Punjabi Belt)₹60–80Cr
- UK / Canada / USA₹30–45Cr
- Australia / NZ₹8–12Cr
- Middle East₹6–10Cr
Rights Revenue
- OTT Platform₹25–40Cr
- Music Rights₹12–18Cr
- Satellite TV₹15–20Cr
- Digital Download₹4–6Cr
Audience Segments
- Punjab & HaryanaPrimary
- UK Punjabi DiasporaPrimary
- Canada / USA NRICore
- Hindi Drama FansCrossover
₹160–230 Crore · Significant upside on music virality and OTT bidding war potential · Surinder Shinda's global brand guarantees diaspora-wide theatrical pull.
Lae Chal Ve sits at the intersection of Rabb Da Radio's emotional authenticity and DDLJ's epic romantic scope — with a production quality and cast firepower that no other Punjabi film has matched in the NRI diaspora space.
Featuring popular Punjabi artists Surinder Shinda, Gurmeet Saajan, Gurpreet Bhangu, and Gurinder Makhna — built-in fan bases across India, UK, Canada and beyond. No marketing budget needed to introduce these names.
Dr. Lakhvinder Singh Johal's 35+ years of craft + Tarlochan Singh Bilga's cultural authority = a film that feels both timeless and urgently contemporary.
Based on real emotional events — not a formula. The dual-world structure (Punjab ↔ UK) resonates with every generation of the diaspora simultaneously. Parents and children will both cry at different moments.
Six songs composed by Raju Singh, Sukhjinder Alfaaz, and T. Singh Bilga. Music rights are a standalone revenue stream. Viral potential of Babal Da Vehra and the title track is significant.
"A truth is that the happiest love story that remains in my memory is one with no ending." — Tarlochan Singh Bilga. The ambiguous ending drives discussion, repeat viewership, and social media engagement — a built-in marketing phenomenon.
Vaisakhi / Baisakhi Season — April theatrical release. The single largest Punjabi cultural moment globally. Maximum diaspora convergence worldwide.
8-week theatrical exclusivity · Premium SVOD release negotiated pre-production · Target: Amazon Prime / Netflix / Zee5 international rights bidding competition.
Founded by Tarlochan Singh Bilga — one of the founding pioneers of Bhangra music in the United Kingdom. TSB Productions operates at the intersection of authentic Punjabi storytelling and international commercial cinema, with deep roots in both the Indian subcontinent and the global diaspora community.
Golden Star U.K. brings Bhangra's global reach to cinema distribution. Bill Media Enterprises provides the UK production infrastructure — studio access, talent coordination, and international release capability — ensuring Lae Chal Ve reaches every corner of the diaspora.
Ganraj Studio, Mumbai · All DI, color grading, VFX, sound mixing, and final mastering. India's trusted destination for Punjabi-Hindi film post-production excellence.