At Palani, the elephant, “Gajaraja,” is bribed by Vijay’s men to attack. As Munnes stands his ground, the elephant raises its leg to stomp. In slow motion, Munnes does not flinch. Instead, he offers the elephant a simple parotta . The elephant smells it. It remembers a kind old mahout from Munnes’s childhood. The elephant kneels, wraps its trunk around Munnes, and places it on his head. The crowd weeps.
Vijay, furious, announces that his wedding will happen at the same temple, at the same time. The climax is a logistical war. Two pandals. Two elephants. Two thousand guests. As the priests chant, Vijay’s men cut the power. Munnes, using his parotta skillet as a shield and a bag of chili powder as a weapon, single-handedly takes on thirty men in a kitchen-supplies brawl. The climax fight happens on a 50-foot-long wedding buffet table —flying idlis, exploding soda bottles, and a final showdown where Munnes pins Vijay using a rolling pin and a giant dosa tawa . The Grand Finale With the goons defeated, the power restored, and the stars perfectly aligned, Munnes stands at the altar. But he doesn’t wear a silk sherwani. He wears his white veshti and a simple shirt, the same one he wore at his stall. the great wedding of munnes movie
In Dubai, Vijay is in a hospital bed, covered in chili powder. He sneezes. A single cumin seed flies out of his nose and lands on a plate. He looks at the camera. “Munnes… I will have my revenge. In the sequel: The Great Divorce of Munnes .” At Palani, the elephant, “Gajaraja,” is bribed by
One rainy night, a vintage Rolls-Royce screeches to a halt. Out steps Theeba Kumari, the heiress of the $4 billion “Kumari Spices” empire. She’s fiery, brilliant, and running away from her own engagement party to a slick Dubai businessman. Hungry and defiant, she demands Munnes’s signature Kothu Parotta . Instead, he offers the elephant a simple parotta
All-time blockbuster. Audiences threw parottas at the screen in celebration. Critics called it “the Baahubali of wedding catering.”