The Housefull universe couldn't care less about being politically correct. It is a celebration of humour that many progressive cine-goers thought we left in the 80s, mining giggles from sexist plots that rummage through jokes at the expense of women, queers, differently abled people, and the black community.
But the thing is lechery (Akshay Kumar in an interview did say Housefull 2 has "love, letch, and lots of adventure") works commercially; the box office numbers betray the willingness of people to engage with such content despite its polarizing, problematic nature.
Gearing up to the release of the fourth film in the Housefull franchise, we look back at the history of political incorrectness that the series has minted for box office collections across the country.
Now, here is the confusing part. Does laughing at sexist jokes, acknowledging its sexism, make one sexist?
I thoroughly enjoyed Sadashiv Amrapurkar's role as the evil transwoman peddling in prostitution in 1991's Sadak. It's not hard to see how problematic it is, depicting transwomen as pimps in a time when there was close to no representation of trans people in the arts. It was a deliciously hammy performance; it was also memorably awful. How do we categorize such a reaction? As transphobic?
The Housefull franchise is one that many enjoyed, many reviled, but interestingly there also many who laughed uncomfortably, knowing fully well that the humour is offensive. But offensive humour is humour too. Or is it?
In that sense, it is hard to place Housefull, a series that places its audience somewhere between the humoured and the horrified.