Jassi ignored them. The climax—where the heroine walks down the aisle only to find his empty wheelchair and a letter saying, "Milan agle janam te" (See you in the next life)—was devastating. Women walked out of cinemas red-eyed. Men sat in their cars for ten minutes before driving home.
Vapsi did not break box office records in terms of money. But it won the National Film Award for Best Punjabi Film. And the morning after the awards, Jassi Shergill held a press conference.
Released on May 7, 2026 , this is one of the freshest titles in the genre. Shera : Scheduled for release on May 14, 2026 .
By now, the pressure was immense. Six hits? No one in modern Pollywood had done six. The film was a larger-than-life action thriller. Jassi played a vigilante who uses traditional Punjabi martial arts (Gatka) to fight drug lords.
Producers were now wary. One-hit-wonders were common. Could he do it again?
It earned ₹40 crore. Hit number three.
He announced his retirement from acting. Not from films—he would direct and produce—but from the race.
The industry laughed. “A ticket-seller as a hero?”
Jassi ignored them. The climax—where the heroine walks down the aisle only to find his empty wheelchair and a letter saying, "Milan agle janam te" (See you in the next life)—was devastating. Women walked out of cinemas red-eyed. Men sat in their cars for ten minutes before driving home.
Vapsi did not break box office records in terms of money. But it won the National Film Award for Best Punjabi Film. And the morning after the awards, Jassi Shergill held a press conference.
Released on May 7, 2026 , this is one of the freshest titles in the genre. Shera : Scheduled for release on May 14, 2026 .
By now, the pressure was immense. Six hits? No one in modern Pollywood had done six. The film was a larger-than-life action thriller. Jassi played a vigilante who uses traditional Punjabi martial arts (Gatka) to fight drug lords.
Producers were now wary. One-hit-wonders were common. Could he do it again?
It earned ₹40 crore. Hit number three.
He announced his retirement from acting. Not from films—he would direct and produce—but from the race.
The industry laughed. “A ticket-seller as a hero?”