2 Harihar Nagar

2 Harihar Nagar is a 2009 Indian Malayalam-language comedy thriller film written and directed by Lal and produced by P. N. Venugopal starring Mukesh, Siddique, Jagadish and Ashokan.

Mahadevan is a Dubai based businessman and a part-time personality development trainer who is married to Sulochana and they have daughter Meenakshi, but their family life is not successful.

Appukuttan is a dentist, living in Mumbai who often troubles his wife Janaki and twin sons Manu and Vinu.

The prologue show them preparing to travel back to Harihar Nagar to attend Thomas Kutty's wedding.

After many years of "enjoying" his bachelor life, Thomas Kutty has decided to settle down and marry an orphan Jesseentha who belonged to the same church as him.

Disappointed at how life has become sombre after growing up and being focused with their family, they decide to revert to their younger selves for the rest of the trip.

While staying at Govindan Kutty's house, they are greeted with flowers left at the doorstep with a tag reading "Maya".

Trying to find the weakness that will draw her attention, that night Appukuttan looks to the window and is frightened by the sight of a ghostly figure with a "burned" face.

After a lot of twists and turns they confront Freddy who has a time bomb attached to his pet Lousie, a clinging lizard on Appukuttan.

Finally, The time bomb gets caught on Thomas Kutty while Freddy presses the ignition to burst in 30 seconds.

Thomas Kutty realises his mistake and confess that everything was a plan he made to get the money to pay a debt he had while gambling.

Sify wrote "2 Harihar Nagar is just what intelligent filmmaking is all about and, no wonder, this delightful comedy is a winner from the word go".

[7] Rediff wrote: "The main reason 2 Harihar Nagar works is because the performance of the foursome that Lal is able to extract, giving us a sense of deja vu" and gave it 3 stars out of 5.

[8] Indiaglitz wrote: "To Harihar Nagar definitely offers rib tickling comedy and delightful watch from the word goes, with apt mixing up of inexhaustible laughter and few moods of seriousness at intervals".