The goon is the same man who once betrayed Ok’s late father. Ok learns that saying “OK” to every fight isn’t bravery—it’s running from the one real battle he’s been avoiding.

They clash immediately. But when Ok’s childhood friend’s sister is threatened by an influential goon-turned-politician (played by a cameo villain), Meher and Ok must unite—his muscle and her mind—to expose the goon’s illegal land grab.

His best friend (comic relief) thinks Ok is a legend. His mother (Nirmal Rishi) thinks he’s wasting time. But the village calls him “Sarpanch of Small Problems.”

Enter (Rubina Bajwa), a modern, city-bred lawyer who arrives to handle a land title case against Ok’s own uncle. She’s all logic, papers, and courtrooms. He’s all pind (village) instinct and jigra (guts).

(Harpal Singh) is known in his village Fatehpur Randhawa as the guy who says “OK” to every challenge. Whether it’s recovering a stolen buffalo, settling a property feud between brothers, or breaking up a lovers’ quarrel, Ok Jutt has a solution—usually involving witty one-liners, mild threats, and a cup of chai .

Instead of a lathi charge, Ok tricks the goon in a public panchayat using audio evidence recorded by Meher. No violence—just clever Punjabi dialogue, emotional confrontation with his mother, and a final “OK” that now means commitment , not just agreement.

Ok Jutt.in New Punjabi Movie [work] Today

The goon is the same man who once betrayed Ok’s late father. Ok learns that saying “OK” to every fight isn’t bravery—it’s running from the one real battle he’s been avoiding.

They clash immediately. But when Ok’s childhood friend’s sister is threatened by an influential goon-turned-politician (played by a cameo villain), Meher and Ok must unite—his muscle and her mind—to expose the goon’s illegal land grab. ok jutt.in new punjabi movie

His best friend (comic relief) thinks Ok is a legend. His mother (Nirmal Rishi) thinks he’s wasting time. But the village calls him “Sarpanch of Small Problems.” The goon is the same man who once

Enter (Rubina Bajwa), a modern, city-bred lawyer who arrives to handle a land title case against Ok’s own uncle. She’s all logic, papers, and courtrooms. He’s all pind (village) instinct and jigra (guts). But when Ok’s childhood friend’s sister is threatened

(Harpal Singh) is known in his village Fatehpur Randhawa as the guy who says “OK” to every challenge. Whether it’s recovering a stolen buffalo, settling a property feud between brothers, or breaking up a lovers’ quarrel, Ok Jutt has a solution—usually involving witty one-liners, mild threats, and a cup of chai .

Instead of a lathi charge, Ok tricks the goon in a public panchayat using audio evidence recorded by Meher. No violence—just clever Punjabi dialogue, emotional confrontation with his mother, and a final “OK” that now means commitment , not just agreement.