That video of Vicky and Vidya) is a 2024 Indian Hindi-language comedy film starring Rajkummar Rao and Triptii Dimri as the titular couple in pursuit of their missing sex tape.
In 1997 in Rishikesh, Vidya, a doctor, calls off her arranged marriage and instead tricks her parents into letting her marry her childhood sweetheart, Vicky, a mehendi artist.
The following day, a friend alerts Vicky that their ancestral sword was found with a tourist from Zimbabwe, who reveals she got it from the flea market and leads him to Chaabiwale Chacha, Badshah's business partner.
Vicky finds a comatose Badshah in his hotel room along with the CD player he stole, but the disc is later revealed to have been removed.
A heartbroken Vicky tries to commit suicide by jumping in front of a train, but Vidya saves him at the last moment, and they reconcile, vowing to solve the issue together.
Bulbul didi, a local godwoman, and her idiotic henchmen Sunil and Shetty are revealed to be the ones who left Badshah for dead and stole the disc from his hotel room.
Vicky and Vidya break into her parents' house to get the money but only find a stash of gutka inside the safe, while Chanda convinces Laadle to give her 2 lakhs.
Vicky and Vidya return home and accidentally reveal the truth to his grandfather, who assumes the tape involves him and the maid, and gives them 2 lakhs he had borrowed after overhearing the call.
When apprehended, Pardesi reveals that Sajjan Kumar organizes community weddings under the guise of charity, offers them free lodging at his farmhouse for the night, and later records the couples and sells the videos to a Sheikh from Dubai.
Laadle intercepts the Sheikh's car and takes his place while Sajjan finds out that his daughter Swati is among the people who got married in the ceremony.
"[19] Shubhra Gupta of The Indian Express gave 1.5 stars and criticised the screenplay saying that "the comedy film has exactly five lines that make you chuckle.
"[20] Sukanya Verma of rediff.com rated the film 1.5/5 stars and wrote in her review that "Between tons of sexual innuendo and Kapil Sharma brand of slapstick gags characterised in loud caricatures, moronic behaviour, flimsy wigs and cartoonish rhythm, Vicky Vidya Ka Woh Wala Video's jarring notions of exuberance have nothing novel to offer".
[22] Aishwarya Vasudevan of OTTPlay gave 2/5 stars and wrote the film "is a throwback to 90s comedy, but it delivers diminishing returns with outdated humour and missed opportunities.
"[25] Renuka Vyavahare of The Times of India gave 2.5 stars out of 5 and said that "It tries too hard to be funny, nostalgic (90’s songs are inserted repeatedly) and moralistic but the climax gets way too bizarre for your liking.
"[26] Anuj Kumar of The Hindu said in his review that "Promising to be a laugh riot, Raaj Shaandilyaa’s bouquet of comic characters doesn’t bloom to its potential".