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Toilet Ek Prem Katha | Akshay Kumar | Bhumi Pednekar | Sana Khan | Anupam Kher | Divyendu | Movies Jankari

Toilet Ek Prem Katha | Akshay Kumar | Bhumi Pednekar | Sana Khan | Anupam Kher | Divyendu Sharma | Movies Jankari
Release date :- 11 August 2017
Directed By :- Shree Narayan Singh
Produced By :- Plan C Studios, Viacom 18 Motion Pictures
Star Cast :-  Akshay Kumar|Bhumi Pednekar | Sana Khan | Anupam Kher| Divyendu Sharma | Movies Jankari

Toilet Ek Prem Katha | Akshay Kumar | Bhumi Pednekar | Sana Khan | Anupam Kher | Divyendu | Movies Jankari


Star Cast :-  Akshay Kumar|Bhumi Pednekar | Sana Khan | Anupam Kher| Divyendu Sharma | Movies Jankari

                   Toilet Ek Prem Katha Official Trailer

                                                     Download full Movie

In an Indian town Nandgaon, Uttar Pradesh, a gathering of ladies go to a field, away from their town close to Nandgaon in the early hours of the day to crap in the open, behind the front of shrubs. Pandit Vimalnath Sharma, Keshav's father, is a very religious and superstitious priest who believes that Keshav's marriage to a black buffalo will help improve his fortune. As a result, Keshav must marry a black buffalo.

Keshav meets Jaya, a college-educated girl, falls in love with her, and they eventually get Jaya to marry Keshav. Keshav's father, on the other hand, believes that Keshav's horoscope dictates that he should only marry a woman with two thumbs on her left hand. Since Jaya doesn't satisfy this necessity, Keshav has a fake thumb made and gives it to Jaya who wears it as a ring on her thumb. Their marriage is approved by Keshav's unsuspecting father.

On her most memorable morning in Keshav's home, Jaya hesitantly goes to a field to poo, yet returns upset without crapping and whines about it to Keshav. Jaya remains steadfast despite Keshav's repeated attempts to persuade her to give up her insistence on the need for a toilet. After a while, one day she gets locked up in the toilet and the train departs the station, and agitated and frustrated Jaya leaves Keshav and moves back to her parents' house, he makes a couple of temporary adjustments to resolve the issue. First, he takes her to a neighbor's house, which has a portable toilet for a bedridden elderly woman, and then he takes her on a train that has a seven-minute stop at the village railway station. He doesn't

Keshav, with the assistance of Jaya, contacts the relevant regulatory authority and begins the construction of a toilet in his front yard after a futile attempt to persuade his sarpanch and the villagers to construct toilets in the village. The sarpanch and Keshav's father make arrangements to tear down the toilet while Keshav is still asleep when the construction is finished. However, Keshav wakes up before the toilet is completely demolished, preserving it.

Jaya now seeks a divorce in the local court, citing the lack of a toilet in her husband's home as her primary justification. The case draws a lot of attention from the media because it is one of a kind. Legislators and the concerned government divisions get a move on hurry the development of latrines in Keshav's town. However, Keshav's father maintains his decision to not have a toilet in his home until Keshav's mother, while going outside to urinate, falls on the doorstep, injures her hip, and cries vehemently that she must use the toilet that Keshav built in the front yard because she cannot possibly walk to the fields to urinate. Keshav's father finally gives in and helps his mother use the bathroom after much resistance. He then, at that point, understands that a latrine is without a doubt a basic necessity inside a family.

On the day of the hearing in Keshav and Jaya's divorce case, the Chief Minister's office sends the judge an official notice urging him or her not to grant their divorce because the construction of toilets in their village will begin the next day. The couple emerges happily married. Keshav's dad apologizes to Jaya for his obstinacy. During the credits, it is shown that villagers are waiting in line to use mobile toilets outside of their village as the construction of toilets in the village continues.