But by evening, Mr. Sethi’s phone rang. Then Gurdeep’s. Then the distributor’s.
“End of the line,” Gurdeep says.
One evening, a young man in a hoodie gets in. He’s scrolling on his phone—green logo glowing. YoMovies Punjab. The man laughs. “Bro, I just downloaded ten new Punjabi films. The whole industry is on there.” yomovies punjab
Gurdeep felt the ground vanish.
Over the next week, Mitti da Punjab earned only 12% of its expected box office. Theatres cancelled shows. Mr. Sethi stopped taking calls. Gurdeep’s wife, Simran, quietly packed away her jewelry—the little that was left. Their son, a bright 10-year-old who wanted to be a filmmaker, asked, “Papa, why don’t people want to pay for your dreams?” But by evening, Mr
The young man pays and leaves. And Gurdeep sits in the dark taxi, watching the rain wash the neon sign that once read: “Mitti da Punjab – Now Showing.”
The film was his everything.
That night, Gurdeep couldn’t sleep. He opened his laptop and, trembling, typed the URL: . The site was garish—pop-ups for gambling, a search bar full of stolen films, and there, at number one: Mitti da Punjab (2024) CAMRip – 720p . He clicked. The audio was hollow. The colors were washed out. His beautiful shot of the harvest moon over the canal looked like a smudge of mustard oil. And yet, the comment section was alive: “Thx YoMovies! Why pay 500 rupees?” “Gurdeep Singh is overrated anyway.” “Downloading for my NRI family. Free mai dekhna hai.” A single tear slid down his cheek. Not for the money—though that was devastating. But for the years. The sleepless nights. The take where the actress cried so hard she had to be comforted for an hour. Reduced to a grainy, stolen file on a site that would vanish tomorrow and reappear as YoMovies Punjab 2.0 the day after.